| taobh stòc | thwart support. [NOTES: ‘stòc’ corrected to ‘stoc’.] | 
| aparan | a round support placed in a boat’s gunnel. Usually fitted in older boats. | 
| fàsag | plug or stopper. | 
| maodhan | a joint called strake point. Two bits of wood like the diagram brought together and fixed by nails.  | 
| tàll | an adze. Carpenter’s tool. | 
| glamaradh | a wooden clamp which could be adjusted depending on the thickness of what you were working with. | 
| sgearbhadh | scarfing joint. Special angle joint in timber. Indentations made here [NOTES: see arrows in the illustration] so that the timber slotted together.  | 
| sgearfadh | [See sgearbhadh.] | 
| fliuch bhòrd | garboard strake. | 
| lionadh | support at the front of a boat attached to the keel.   | 
| crann tarrain | trenail. | 
| gàg | slit at the top of a trenail. Wedge placed here so that the nail expanded like a modern day rawlplug.   | 
| banbh | to rebate. A joiner’s term. E.g. a rebate in a boat’s stem or keel. This term also applied when making doors.  | 
| cuairt | breast or stern hook. A round bit of wood used to keep the gunnel tight.   | 
| ceannachrag | knee support underneath seats. | 
| cnòt | blocks of wood attached to the inside of the rowlocks. Kept the oar tight. Could also be attached to the oar itself. | 
| cnagan | the actual pins on the rowlock. | 
| luirge | the oar’s stock. | 
| dorn raimh | where you gripped the oar. | 
| uisge stiureach | the furrow-like wave which follows a boat. “Dè a tha aig bàta ’s nach dean i an gnothach as aonais?” Answer: uisge stiureach or wake in English. | 
| calcadh | caulking a boat. | 
| strachd bheòil | topmost stroke. | 
| calbanan | galvanised nails with square heads. Used for boat construction. | 
| lannan | washers. | 
| iarunn barraidh | clenching iron.   | 
| torra | an auger. Tool for boring wood. [NOTES: corrected to ‘tora’.] | 
| rèic a’ chruinn | an obtuse angle on a mast. | 
| sùlairean | boats built at the time of the Zulu War. Characterised by having an obtusely angled rear stem. | 
| bròg a’ chruinn | mast step. | 
| suthag | a patch. | 
| màrlspàic | an iron spike tapering at one end. Used for splicing wire. Also had wooden equivalent for splicing rope. | 
| spladhsadh | splicing. | 
| duin iaruinn | capstan or hauler. | 
| lamaraig | a naturally formed landing place. | 
| luidhainn | a wooden board to which a rod would be attached. Situated near the vent at the top of an old house which had a fire in the centre of the room. The board would be adjusted according to wind direction so that the smoke would be carried away. [NOTES: note added above ‘luidhainn’ – luidhein.] | 
| branndair | an iron frame or rail round a range or fire. | 
| ard dorus | door lintel. | 
| ard bhùin | threshold. | 
| leth chas | a rafter. | 
| sparr ghaoithadh | a tie across the rafters.   | 
| slinndair | a large stone slab used for door lintels. | 
| tuainnaireachd | making designs on wood. | 
| souladh | shellfish which was used as bait. Some say it without pronouncing the ‘adh’. [NOTES: corrected to ‘suladh’.] | 
| cuigeal | thinks this was a primitive version of the modern spinning wheel. Not clear about this. | 
| snothad | a dozen hairs taken from a horse’s tail; doubled and used as fishing gut. | 
| sgonnan | a long bit of wood used to stir barley. | 
| modha | change. Could be money or a change in the weather, fortune, etc. | 
| brosgal | persuading. | 
| annlann | a covering. | 
| [faolag] | Faolag gheal air an uisge – white spray on the sea’s surface. Also ‘faolag dhubh’. | 
| strachd mheadhoin | the middle strake in a boat. |