Bumboat
{{Short description|Small boat used to ferry supplies to ships moored away from the shore}}
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A bumboat is a small boat used to ferry supplies to ships moored away from the shore.{{cite journal |last=Bradwell |first=Judy |date=12 March 1979 |title=The private fun of Lodge and Heath |journal=New Zealand Woman's Weekly |pages=24–26}} The name comes from the combination of the Dutch word for a canoe—"boomschuit" ("boom" meaning "tree"), and "boat".
In Tobias Smollett's 1748 novel, The Adventures of Roderick Random, a "bumboat woman" conducts business with sailors imprisoned on board a pressing tender moored near the Tower Wharf on the Thames River, London, England.
In HMS Pinafore, W. S. Gilbert describes Little Buttercup as a Bumboat Woman.
In Singapore, the term "bumboat" is applied to small water taxis and boats that take tourists on short tours.
See also
- {{annotated link|Ship's tender}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Wikisource1911Enc|Bumboat}}
- [https://www.gsarchive.net/bab_ballads/html/bumboat_woman.html "The Bumboat Woman's Story"]—one of W. S. Gilbert's Bab Ballads (from the [https://web.archive.org/web/20180720100917/http://gsarchive.net/index.html Gilbert & Sullivan Archive])
- [http://www.ranjit.com/gallery/singapore/Bumboat Singaporean bumboat] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120721232706/http://www.ranjit.com/gallery/singapore/Bumboat |date=2012-07-21 }}—photo by Rajit Vijayan
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