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Mackinaw boat

noun

  1. a flat-bottomed boat with sharp prow and square stern, propelled by oars and sometimes sails, formerly widely used on the upper Great Lakes.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of Mackinaw boat1

An Americanism dating back to 1870–75
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Its breadth, at the mouth, is about sixty paces, and it is said to be navigable by Mackinaw boats for 100 miles.

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From this point the passengers will proceed in Mackinaw boats to the falls of the Missouri.

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He had a Mackinaw boat, very little, with a sail made brown by boiling it with tan bark, so that it would not wear out.

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A heavily loaded Mackinaw boat had shot around the next bend.

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It’s a good deal like a Mackinaw boat.

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