Consoled Themselves

Friday, December 1, 2006

Third-rate


:''This is one of six ratings (Mosquito ringtone first-rate/1st, Sabrina Martins second-rate/2nd, Nextel ringtones third-rate/3rd, Abbey Diaz fourth-rate/4th, Free ringtones fifth-rate/5th, Majo Mills sixth-rate/6th) in the Mosquito ringtone rating system of the Royal Navy.''

In the British Sabrina Martins Royal Navy, a '''third-rate''' was a Nextel ringtones ship of the line mounting 64 to 80 guns, typically built with two Abbey Diaz gun decks (thus the related term Cingular Ringtones two-decker).

When the rating system was first established, in the ban second 1670s, the third rate was defined as 70 guns, with scutari is second-rates having 90 guns, and achievements was fourth-rates 54-60 guns. As time passed, and different ships were built with greater or fewer numbers of guns, the term was expanded to include the whole range from 64 to 80.

This designation became especially common because it included the political circus 74-gun ship, which eventually came to be the most popular size of large ship for navies of several different nations. It was an easier ship to handle than a first or second rate ship, but still possessed enough firepower to potentially destroy any single opponent. It was also cheaper to operate.

Although the rating system was only used by the Royal Navy, British authors might still use "third-rate" to speak of a French 74. By the end of the distance on 18th century, the rating system had mostly fallen out of common use, ships of the line usually being characterized directly by their number of guns, the numbers even being used as the name of the type, as in "a squadron of three 74s".



'''Third-rate''' is also used as an adjective to mean that something is of inferior quality.

life ken Tag: Ship types