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spenjovewkwhalo 12 hours ago

The origins of Port and Starboard on ships.

Chosen to be independent of a mariners orientation.

Starboard - most sailors were right handed and the steering oar was placed on the right. Star = steer. Board = side of boat.

Port - as steering oars got bigger, boats tended to dock on the left hand side. This became to be known as “lardboard” which sounded too much like starboard, so it was changed to “Port” (as in the side typically facing the port side.

toomuchtodo 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

A fun mnemonic I use to remember port is to the left is "lp unix command = line printer = left to port".

cylentwolf a minute ago | parent | next [-]

I just remember that port is four letters and left is four letters. :)

nosrepa 44 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

I just remember that left and port have the same number of letters.

nicbou 10 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

In French, there is babord and tribord. The mnemonic is ba-tri, or “battery”.

Gazoche 8 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Oh I didn't know this one. For me the mnemonic was " 'ba' has an 'a' like 'gauche' (left), and 'tri' has an 'i' like 'droite' (right)".

harperlee 10 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

In Spanish, it's babor and estribor. My personal mnemonic (me and most people being right-handed) is that the estribo (the stirrup, but I always though it was the reins - TIL) in a horse go on the right hand and the boba hand (the clumsy hand) is the left one.

sdoering 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

In German it is Steuerbord und Backbord. And my mnemonic is the "r" in Steuerbord = the "r" in right hand side (when looking to the bow that is).

azepoi 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Both likely come from (middle) dutch bakboord (the side of your back) facing the stierboord (the side with the steering oar) . Stierboord became estribord then tribord. Its more explicit in modern german and dutch.