The AI-powered English dictionary
plural whalers
One who hunts whales; a person employed in the whaling industry. quotations examples
For a whaler′s wife to have been “′round the Cape” half a dozen times, or even more, was nothing extraordinary.
1890, Century Illustrated Magazine, XL, 511
Whalers have always overexploited their stocks, driving them to commercial extinction. […] American whalers, operating at first from the coast and later in sea-going boats, took about 200 000 right whales in addition to humpbacks and grays.
1986 June 5, Jeremy Cherfas, “What price whales?”, in New Scientist, page 36
The whalers brought a new way of life. They brought a chance for travel. Many Chamorros traveled to London and the United States. Over eight hundred Chamorro whalers settled in Honolulu.
2001, Lawrence J. Cunningham, Janice J. Beaty, A History of Guam, page 170
A seagoing vessel used for hunting whales. quotations examples
But o′ Thursday t′ Resolution, first whaler back this season, came in port.
1863, Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, Sylvia′s Lovers, section V
The log of the Emily Morgan, an American whaler that visited Guam many times, described Spanish control: […] .
1995, Robert F. Rogers, Destiny′s Landfall: A History of Guam, page 98
But the Golden Lion was ambushed by a Naval frigate thinking that a whaler′s crew would be useful pressed men. The whaler′s crew didn′t agree, and there was a bloody skirmish on shore between the press gang and the crew of the Golden Lion which caused such a scandal that from then on whalers′ men were exempt from conscription.
2001, Arabella McIntyre-Brown, Liverpool: The First 1,000 years, page 79
One who whales (flogs or beats). examples
(slang) A large, strong person.
(slang) Something of unusually great size, a whopper, a whacker.
(Australia) Any shark of the family Carcharhinidae; a requiem shark. quotations examples
The whalers (or requiem sharks) are one of the largest and best known family of sharks. Worldwide there are 48 species in 12 genera. However, relatively few species are on the Great Barrier Reef.
1997, John Ernest Randall, Gerald R Allen, Roger C. Steene, Fishes of the Great Barrier Reef, 2nd edition, page 17
The whaler shark family, which includes the grey reef shark (Carcharhinus amblyrhynchos),silvertip (Carcharhinus albimarginatus), bull shark (Carcharhinus leucas) and bronze whaler (Carcharhinus brachyurus) are fast moving, territorial and have bitten divers snd surfers in the past.
2003, Mark Thornley, Veda Dante, Peter Wilson, Action Guide: Surfing Australia, Tuttle Publishing, HK, page 264
You can also take a dip with lemon, whaler and other nonpredatory sharks.
2008, Alan Murphy, Justin Flynn, Olivia Pozzan, Paul Harding, Queensland & the Great Barrier Reef, 5th edition, Lonely Planet, page 219
(Australian slang, dated) A sundowner; one who cruises about. quotations
the nomad, “the whaler,” it is who will find the new order hostile to his vested interest of doing nothing.
1893 August 12, Sydney Morning Herald