Pirate Lingo!
If ye have any questions or suggestions on new words. Feel free to let me know!
Don't Forget - Talk Like a Pirate Day is September 19th!
Arr--Pretty much anything. Filler for most conversations.
Addled
-- Mad, insane, or just stupid. An "addlepate" is a fool.
Aft
-- Short for "after." Toward the rear of the ship.
Ahoy
-- "Hello!"
Avast!
-- "Hey!" Could be used as "Stop that!" or "Who goes there?"
Belay
-- Stop that. "Belay that talk!"
would mean "Shut up!"
Belaying pin
-- A short wooden rod to which a ship's rigging is secured. A common
improvised weapon aboard a sailing ship, because they're everywhere,
they're easily
picked up, and they are the right size and weight to be used as
clubs.
Bilge!
-- Nonsense, or foolish talk. The bilges of a ship are the lowest
parts, inside
the hull along the keel. They fill with stinking bilgewater -- or
just "bilge."
Bilge-sucking
-- A very uncomplimentary adjective.
Black Spot
-- To "place the Black Spot" on
another pirate is to sentence him to
death, to warn him he is marked for death, or sometimes just to
accuse him of a
serious crime before other pirates.
Blaggard
-- "Blackguard." An insult.
Blimey!
-- An exclamation of surprise.
Booty
-- Loot.
Bosun
-- Boatswain; a petty officer.
Bowsprit
-- The slanted spar at a ship's
prow.
Brethren of the Coast
-- The Caribbean buccaneers called
themselves by this
name in the 1640-1680 period. During this time, they actually formed
a sort of
fraternity, and did not (usually) fight each other or even steal
from each other. After
1680, a new generation of pirates appeared, who did not trust each
other . . . with
good reason.
Briny deep
-- The ocean. Probably no pirate in
all history ever used this phrase, but
don't let that stop you, especially if you can roll the R in
"briny"!
Buccaneer
-- A general term for the Caribbean pirates.
Bucko
-- Familiar term. "Me bucko" = "my friend."
Cap'n
-- Short for "captain."
Cat
o'nine tails, or just "cat"
-- a whip with many lashes, used for flogging. "A taste
of the cat" might refer to a full flogging, or just a single blow to
"smarten up" a
recalcitrant hand.
Chandler, or ship-chandler
-- see Sutler.
Chantey
-- A sailor's work song. Also
spelled "shantey" or "shanty."
Chase
-- The ship being pursued. "The
chase is making full sail, sir" = "The ship
we're after is going as fast as she can."
Chest
-- Traditional treasure container.
Corsair
-- A more romantic term for pirate.
But still a pirate.
Crow's nest
-- A small platform, sometimes
enclosed, near the top of a mast, where
a lookout could have a better view when watching for sails or for
land.
Cutlass
-- A curved sword, like a saber but
heavier. Traditional pirate weapon. Has
only one cutting edge; may or may not have a useful point.
Davy
Jones' locker
-- The bottom of the sea.
Deadlights
-- Eyes. "Use yer deadlights, matey!"
Dead
men tell no tales
-- Standard pirate excuse for leaving no survivors.
Dog
--
A mild insult, perhaps even a friendly one.
Doubloon
-- A Spanish gold coin. At different
times, it was worth either 4 or 16 silver
pesos, or "pieces of eight."
Fair
winds!
-- Goodbye, good luck!.
Feed
the fish
-- What you do when you are thrown
into the sea, dead or alive.
Gangway!
-- "Get out of my way!"
Godspeed!
-- Goodbye, good luck!
Grog
--
Generically, any alcoholic drink. Specifically, rum diluted with
water to make it
go farther.
Grub
--
Food.
Gun
-- A cannon.
Fore, or forrard
-- Toward the front end of the ship.
Flogging
-- Punishment by caning, or by whipping with the cat.
Hands
-- The crew of a ship; sailors.
Handsomely
-- Quickly. "Handsomely now, men!" =
"Hurry up!"
Head
-- The toilet facilities aboard a modern ship. This will do for
modern piratical
talk. The toilet facilities aboard an ACTUAL pirate ship do not bear
thinking about.
Jack
Ketch
-- The hangman. To dance with Jack
Ketch is to hang.
Jack
Tar, or tar
-- A sailor.
Jollyboat
-- A small but happy craft, perhaps
even one which is a little dinghy.
Jolly Roger
-- The pirates' skull-and-crossbones
flag. It was an invitation to
surrender, with the implication that those who surrendered would be
treated well. A
red flag indicated "no quarter."
Keelhaul
-- Punishment by dragging under the ship, from one side to the
other. The
victim of a keelhauling would be half-drowned, or worse, and
lacerated by the
barnacles that grew beneath the ship.
Kiss
the gunner's daughter
-- A punishment: to be bent over one
of the ship's
guns and flogged.
Lad,
lass, lassie
-- A way to address someone younger
than you.
Landlubber or just lubber
-- A non-sailor.
Letters of Marque
-- Papers issued by a national government during wartime,
entitling a privately owned ship to raid enemy commerce, or even
attack enemy
warships. Early letters of reprisal were issued to merchants to make
it legal for them
to counter-raid pirates! A ship bearing such letters, and operating
within their limits, is
a privateer rather than a pirate . . . that is, a legal combatant
rather than a criminal
and murderer. The problem is that letters of marque aren't always
honored, even by
the government that issued them. Captain Kidd had letters of marque;
his own
country hanged him anyway.
Lights
-- Lungs. A pirate might threaten to
"have someone's lights and liver."
Line
--
A rope in use as part of the ship's rigging, or as a towing line.
When a rope is
just coiled up on deck, not yet being used for anything, it's all
right to call it a rope.
Lookout
-- Someone posted to keep watch on the horizon for other ships or
signs of
land.
Maroon
-- A fairly common punishment for
violation of a pirate ship's articles, or
offending her crew. The victim was left on a deserted coast (or, of
course, an island)
with little in the way of supplies. That way, no one could say that
the unlucky pirate
had actually been killed by his former brethren.
Me
-- A piratical way to say "my."
Me
hearties
-- Typical way for a pirate leader
to address his crew.
Matey
-- A piratical way to address someone in a cheerful, if not
necessarily friendly,
fashion.
No
quarter!
-- Surrender will not be accepted.
On
the Account
-- The piratical life. A man who
went "on the account" was turning
pirate.
Piece of eight
-- A Spanish silver coin worth one
peso or 8 reales. It was sometimes
literally cut into eight pieces, each worth one real.
Pillage
-- To raid, rob, and sack a target
ashore.
Pirate
-- A seagoing robber and murderer.
Contrast with privateer.
Poop
deck
-- The highest deck at the aft end
of a large ship. Smaller ships don't
have a poop; the highest part aft is the quarterdeck.
Port
--
(1) A seaport. (2) The left side of the ship when you are facing
toward her
prow.
Poxy,
poxed
-- Diseased. Used as an insult.
Privateer
-- A ship bearing letters of marque (q.v.), or one of her crew, or
her
captain. Thus, she can only attack an enemy ship, and only in time
of war, but does
so as a representative of her country. A privateer is theoretically
a law-abiding
combatant, and entitled to be treated as an honorable prisoner if
captured.
Prow
--
The "nose" of the ship.
Reef
--
(1) An underwater obstruction of rock or coral which can tear the
bottom out
of a ship. (2) To reef sails is to shorten them, tying them
partially up, either to slow
the ship or to keep a strong wind from putting too much strain on
the masts.
Rope's end
-- another term for flogging. "Ye'll
meet the rope's end for that, me
bucko!"
Rum
(noun)
-- Traditional pirate drink.
Rum
(adjective)
-- Strange or odd. A "rum fellow" is a peculiar person, the sort who
won't say "Arrrr!" on Talk Like A Pirate Day.
Sail
ho!
-- "I see a ship!" The sail, of course, is the first part of a ship
visible over the
horizon.
Salt, old salt
-- An experienced seaman.
Scuppers
-- Openings along the edges of a ship's deck that allow water on
deck to
drain back to the sea rather than collecting in the bilges. "Scupper
that!" is an
expression of anger or derision: "Throw that overboard!"
Scurvy
-- (1) A deficiency disease which
often afflicted sailors; it was caused by lack
of vitamin C. (2) A derogatory adjective suitable for use in a loud
voice, as in "Ye
scurvy dogs!"
Sea
dog
-- An experienced seaman.
Shanty
-- Another spelling for "chantey" - a sea song.
Shark bait
-- (1) Your foes, who are about to
feed the fish (q.v.). (2) A worthless or
lazy sailor; a lubber who is no use aboard ship.
Shipshape
-- Well-organized, under control, finished.
Shiver me timbers!
-- An expression of surprise or
strong emotion.
Sink
me!
-- An expression of surprise.
Smartly
-- Quickly. "Smartly there, men!" = "Hurry up!"
Splice the mainbrace
-- To have a drink. Or, perhaps,
several drinks.
Spyglass
-- A telescope.
Starboard
-- The right side of the ship when
you are facing toward her prow.
Sutler
-- A merchant in port, selling the various things that a ship needed
for
supplies and repairs.
Swab
(noun)
-- A disrespectful term for a
seaman. "Man that gun, ye cowardly
swabs!"
Swab
(verb)
-- To clean something. Being put to
"swabbing the decks" would be a
low-level punishment for a disobedient pirate.
Swag
-- Loot.
Walk
the plank
-- A piratical execution. The
victim, usually blindfolded or with bound
hands or both, is forced to walk along a plank laid over the ship's
side, to fall into the
water below. Except this seems to be a total invention; it first
appeared in
19th-century fiction, long after the great days of piracy.
Weigh anchor
-- To haul the anchor up; more
generally, to leave port.
Wench
-- An individual of the female
persuasion. "Saucy" is a good adjective to add
to this, and if ye can get away with "Me proud beauty!," more power
to ye.
Yo-ho-ho
-- A very piratical thing to say, whether it actually means anything
or not.
![]()