countable
count
common
concrete
I saw the great white sail of the ship.
شاهدت الشراع الأبيض الكبير للسفينة.
The captain straightened the sail of the ship and began to sail.
فرد القبطان شراع السفينة وبدأ بالإبحار.
The sail was torn and the ship stopped moving.
تمزق الشراع وتوقفت السفينة عن الحركة.
in full sail
جميع الأشرعة مفتوحة
a galleon in full sail
take in sail
لف أشرعة السفينة
Lynsey is back in the charthouse navigating, plotting positions and the rest of the crew stand by on deck to take in sail.
"piece of shaped cloth spread so as to catch the wind and cause a vessel to move in water," Old English segl "sail, veil, curtain," from Proto-Germanic *seglom (source also of Old Saxon, Swedish segel, Old Norse segl, Old Frisian seil, Dutch zeil, Old High German segal, German Segel), of obscure origin with no known cognates outside Germanic (Irish seol, Welsh hwyl "sail" are Germanic loan-words). In some sources (Klein, OED) referred to PIE root *sek- "to cut," as if meaning "a cut piece of cloth."