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Scuttlebutt and 'under the weather': These idioms go back to the seafaring 18th century

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Seafaring in the 18th century came with a unique language of its own — and you’re probably using it to this day.

Author David Grann became familiar with naval terms and phrases while writing The Wager: A Tale of Shipwreck, Mutiny and Murder, a true story about the captain and crew of His Majesty’s Ship the Wager.

The book tells the tale of the British warship, which set out on a secret mission in the 1740s to capture a Spanish galleon filled with treasure. But along the way, the ship encounters trouble and eventually becomes wrecked on an island off Patagonia in Chile. The

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Reading: Scuttlebutt and 'under the weather': These idioms go back to the seafaring 18th century

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