Glossary entry

English term or phrase:

windward-leeward courses

English answer:

upwind then downwind races

Added to glossary by sara alnuaimi
Feb 11, 2013 07:19
11 yrs ago
2 viewers *
English term

leeward courses

English Other Ships, Sailing, Maritime conducted on windward leeward courses
The sailing competition will be fleet races conducted on windward leeward courses.

tyhe required expression is "on windward leeward courses".

Thank u in advance.
Votes to reclassify question as PRO/non-PRO:

Non-PRO (1): Charlesp

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Responses

+2
20 mins
English term (edited): windward-leeward courses
Selected

upwind then downwind races

Careful of parsing here - windward and leeward are separate words, but in your context here they go together.

"The windward-leeward course has two marks: one toward the wind and one directly downwind. In this course, you must tack upwind to round the first (windward) mark, then sail downwind to round the second (leeward) mark and then sail upwind to cross the finish line."
http://www.sailingcourse.com/racing/windward-leeward_course....

Diagramme:
http://www.yachting.org.au/sa/course/Windward_Leeward.html

"Windward-Leeward Course

The preferred configuration is the windward-leeward course, because both the upwind and downwind legs are considered tactical for all classes of boats in all wind ranges, whether spinnaker boats or not. The only case when it should not be selected is if the wind is blowing across the short axis of the lake, resulting in a small course area which would become crowded if there were multiple fleets racing as is the case in club racing."
http://www.clsa.us/Courses.htm

also:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windward_and_leeward

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Note added at 21 mins (2013-02-11 07:40:32 GMT)
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Course here is the course the race must take
Peer comment(s):

agree Jack Dunwell : Yes, perhaps "legs" (oh, i see this is mentioned in yr ref!!)
2 hrs
thank you Fourth!
agree Yvonne Gallagher
2 hrs
thank you
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
+2
20 mins

windward/leeward courses (into wind, wind behind)

I think it should be "windward and leeward courses" or "windward/leeward course" to make the meaning clearer.
Peer comment(s):

agree Jenni Lukac (X) : I agree.
1 hr
Thank you.
agree eski
7 hrs
Thank you.
Something went wrong...
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