Port and starboard
{{short description|Nautical terms for direction}}
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File:Ship positionLights.svgs indicating its port (red) and starboard (green) sides]]
Port and starboard are nautical terms for watercraft and spacecraft, referring respectively to the left and right sides of the vessel, when aboard and facing the bow (front).
Vessels with bilateral symmetry have left and right halves which are mirror images of each other. One asymmetric feature is where access to a boat, ship, or aircraft is at the side; it is usually only on the port side (hence the name).
Side
Port side and starboard side respectively refer to the left and right sides of the vessel, when aboard and facing the bow. The port and starboard sides of the vessel always refer to the same portion of the vessel's structure, and do not depend on the position of someone aboard the vessel.
The port side is the side to the left of an observer aboard the vessel and {{em|facing the bow}}, towards the direction the vessel is heading when underway in the forward direction. The starboard side is to the right of such an observer.{{Cite web|url=https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/port-starboard.html|title=Why do ships use 'port' and 'starboard' instead of 'left' and 'right?'|last=US Department of Commerce|first=National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration|website=oceanservice.noaa.gov|language=EN-US|access-date=2020-03-09}}
This convention allows orders and information to be communicated unambiguously, without needing to know which way any particular crew member is facing.{{Cite web | author = NOS Staff | date = December 8, 2014 | title = Why Do Ships use "Port" and "Starboard" Instead of "Left" and "Right?" | url = http://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/port-starboard.html |work = NOAA National Ocean Service (NOS) Ocean Facts | via = OceanService.NOAA.gov | location = Washington, DC | publisher = U.S. Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) | access-date = February 2, 2017 }}{{Cite web | author = RMG Staff | date = February 2, 2017 | title = Port and Starboard: Why do Sailors say 'Port' and 'Starboard', for "Left" and "Right?" | url = http://www.rmg.co.uk/explore/sea-and-ships/facts/faqs/customs-and-origins/port-and-starboard | work = Discover: Explore by Theme | via = RMG.co.uk | location = Greenwich, England, UK | publisher = Royal Museums Greenwich | access-date = February 2, 2017 | archive-date = September 24, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150924092141/http://www.rmg.co.uk/explore/sea-and-ships/facts/faqs/customs-and-origins/port-and-starboard | url-status = dead }}
Etymology
Image:Tapisserie bato1.jpg showing a longship with a steering oar on the starboard side.{{cite book | author = Grape, Wolfgang | year = 1994 | title = The Bayeux Tapestry: Monument to a Norman Triumph | series = Art and Design Series | location = Munich, DEU | publisher = Prestel | isbn = 978-3791313658 | page = [https://archive.org/details/bayeuxtapestry00wolf/page/95 95] | url = https://archive.org/details/bayeuxtapestry00wolf | url-access = registration | access-date = February 2, 2017 }}]]
File:Maschinenfahrzeug (nachts).png
The term starboard derives from the Old English steorbord, steor meaning steer, and bord meaning side. Before ships had rudders, they were steered with a steering oar on the right hand side of the ship, because more people are right-handed. The "steer-board" etymology is shared by the German Steuerbord, Dutch stuurboord and Swedish / Danish / Norwegian styrbord, which gave rise to the French tribord, Italian tribordo,{{efn|name=ITA|However the proper Italian terms for starboard and port are dritta and sinistra respectively. The offshoots from French tribordo and babordo were largely, and only, used in adventure novels of the nineteenth century translated from French.{{cite web |title=tribórdo |website=Vocabolario online Treccani |url=https://www.treccani.it/vocabolario/tribordo}}}} Catalan estribord, Portuguese estibordo, Spanish estribor and Estonian tüürpoord.
Since the steering oar was on the right side of the boat, it would dock on the left side. In Old English, this side was known as bæcbord.{{Cite web |title=Etymology of "starboard" by etymonline |url=https://www.etymonline.com/word/starboard |access-date=2025-05-08 |website=etymonline |language=en-US}} An Anglo-Saxon record of a voyage by Ohthere of Hålogaland used the word "bæcbord" ("back-board") for the left side of a ship. With the steering rudder on the starboard side the man on the rudder had his back to the left side of ship. German Backbord, Dutch bakboord, Swedish babord, Spanish babor, Portuguese bombordo, Italian babordo,{{efn|name=ITA}} French bâbord, and Estonian pakpoord, are all cognate.
From around 1300 it the term ladde-borde was used, from Middle English ladebord, lade meaning load, and bord meaning side. Ladebord was changed to larboard in the 1500s, possibly by association with starboard. This side was also called port, since it was the docking side.{{Cite web |url=https://oceanservice.noaa.gov/facts/port-starboard.html |title=Unlike left and right, port and starboard refer to fixed locations on a vessel. |last=Administration |first=US Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric |website=oceanservice.noaa.gov |language=EN-US |access-date=2017-10-12}} The Oxford English Dictionary cites this usage since 1543.{{cite OED|port|id=148093}}
Larboard sounds similar to starboard and in 1844 the Royal Navy ordered that port be used instead.Admiralty Circular No. 2, November 22, 1844, cited in Western Courier newspaper (Plymouth) December 11, 1844.{{cite book|last1=Norie|first1=John William|author-link=John William Norie|last2=Hobbs|first2=J. S.|title=Sailing directions for the Bay of Biscay, including the coasts of France and Spain, from Ushant to Cape Finisterre|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xREEAAAAQAAJ|access-date=7 February 2010|year=1847|publisher=C. Wilson|orig-year=1840|edition=A new ed., rev. and considerably improved|oclc=41208722|quote=An order, recently issued by the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, states, that in order to prevent mistakes, which frequently occur from the similarity of the words starboard and larboard, in future, the word port is to be substituted for larboard, in all Her Majesty's ships or vessels.|page=1}} The United States Navy followed suit in 1846.{{Cite web | author = George Bancroft | date = February 18, 1846 | title = Port and Starboard: General Order, 18 February 1846 | url = https://www.history.navy.mil/research/library/online-reading-room/title-list-alphabetically/g/general-orders/general-order-port-and-starboard.html |work = General Orders | via = History.Navy.mil | location = Washington, DC | publisher = US Navy, Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC) | access-date = February 2, 2017 }} Larboard continued to be used well into the 1850s by whalers.{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7GNLAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Whaling+journals+even+as+late+as+the+1850s%22 |title=The Whale's Wake |first=Harry |last=Morton |publisher=University of Hawaii Press |isbn=9780824808303 |page=84 |date=1983-01-01 |access-date=2020-03-20 |via=Google Books}} In chapter 12 of Life on the Mississippi (1883) Mark Twain writes larboard to refer to the left side of the ship (Mississippi River steamboat) in his days on the river – circa 1857–1861.{{cite web |last= Twain |first= Mark |authorlink= Mark Twain |title= Life on the Mississippi » Chapter 12 |year= 1883 |website= The Literature Network |url= http://www.online-literature.com/twain/life_mississippi/13/ |quote= ... the steersman at the tiller obeys the order to 'hold her up to starboard;' or, 'let her fall off to larboard; term 'larboard' is never used at sea now, to signify the left hand; but was always used on the river in my time]}} Lewis Carroll rhymed larboard and starboard in "Fit the Second" of The Hunting of the Snark (1876).{{cite book|editor=Gasson, Roy|last=Carroll|first=Lewis|authorlink=Lewis Carroll|title=The Illustrated Lewis Carroll|date=1978|page=231|publisher=Jupiter Books|quote=He was thoughtful and grave - but the orders he gave
Were enough to bewilder a crew.
When he cried "Steer to starboard, but keep her head larboard!"
What on earth was the helmsman to do?}}
Importance of standard terms
The navigational treaty convention, the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea—for instance, as appears in the UK's Merchant Shipping (Distress Signals and Prevention of Collisions) Regulations 1996 (and comparable US documents from the US Coast Guard){{cite book|author = MCA Staff | year = 2004 | orig-year = 1996 | title=The Merchant Shipping (Distress Signals and Prevention of Collisions) Regulations 1996 | url=https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/281965/msn1781.pdf | location = Southampton, ENG | publisher=Crown Department of Transport, Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA)|access-date=2 February 2017}}—sets forth requirements for maritime vessels to avoid collisions, whether by sail or powered, and whether a vessel is overtaking, approaching head-on, or crossing.{{rp|11–12}} To set forth these navigational rules, the terms starboard and port are essential, and to aid in in situ decision-making, the two sides of each vessel are marked, dusk to dawn, by navigation lights, the vessel's starboard side by green and its port side by red.{{rp|15}} Aircraft are lit in the same way.
Other nautical uses
Port and starboard are also commonly used when dividing crews; for example with a two watch system the teams supplying the personnel are often named Port and Starboard. This may extend to entire crews, such as the forward-deployed crews of the Royal Navy’s Gulf-based frigate, {{cite web | url=https://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/news/2020/july/23/200723-montrose-starboard-crew-back-in-the-groove-for-gulf-mission | title=Montrose's Starboard Crew back in the groove for Gulf mission }} or ballistic missile submarines.
See also
- Anatomical terms of location, another example of terms of directionality that do not depend on the location of the observer for things that are bilaterally symmetrical
- Dexter and sinister, in heraldry
- Direction (disambiguation)
- Glossary of nautical terms (disambiguation)
- Handedness
- Laterality, preference in humans etc. for doing things with the left or right hand etc.
- Proper right and proper left, in images of people etc.
- Reflection symmetry
- Sinistral and dextral, chirality, in scientific contexts
- Terms of orientation
Notes
{{notelist}}
References
{{Wiktionary|bæcbord|larboard|starboard|port}}
{{reflist|30em}}
{{Sailing ship elements}}
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