How to use in-sentence of “seaman”:
– A seaman with less than a year’s experience was referred to as a landman.
– The related ranks of ordinary seaman second class and ordinary seaman, engineer’s force, existed in 1876–1885 and 1871–1883, respectively.
– A seaman warns him a storm is approaching.
– The term Ordinary seaman was used in the Royal Navy in the middle of the 18th century.
– This referred to a seaman with less than a year’s experience at sea.
– One needs an Ordinary Seaman Certificate to obtain work.
– Tidd enlisted in the Navy Reserve as a seaman apprentice in 1942, and joined the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps while at Oklahoma University.

Example sentences of “seaman”:
– A Scottish merchant seaman called Captain John Clunies-Ross, who had also served under Raffles in the takeover, set up a compound and Hare’s severely mistreated slaves soon escaped to work under better conditions for Clunies-Ross.
– Cooper got a job as a seaman on a merchant ship.
– She married industrialist Robert Seaman in 1895.
– Seaman Philip Bazaar from Chile received the medal in January 1865 and Seaman John Ortega from Spain in December 1865.
– Fletcher Christian was an EnglandEnglish seaman on “HMS Bounty” when it sailed to Tahiti to collect breadfruit trees in 1787.
– The story is told by a seaman named Ishmael.
– By 1755 he was an able seaman in the “HMS Centaur”, the next year a midshipman on the “HMS Union” and the “HMS Neptune”.
– Ordinary seaman was the second-lowest rank of the 19th century United States Navy.
– Three weeks later, a seaman named Fletcher Christian led a mutiny of the ship.
– He left Bligh and 18 seaman in a small boat, and went back to Tahiti in the “Bounty”.
– The term Landman evolved into a more formal rating for a seaman assigned to unskilled manual labor.
– The term was used to refer to a seaman with between one and two years’ experience at sea.
– He appeared first in “The War Machines” as an Able Seaman serving in the Royal Navy.
– Bligh joined the navy at age 16 when he became an able seaman on “HMS Hunter” in 1770.
- A Scottish merchant seaman called Captain John Clunies-Ross, who had also served under Raffles in the takeover, set up a compound and Hare's severely mistreated slaves soon escaped to work under better conditions for Clunies-Ross.
- Cooper got a job as a seaman on a merchant ship.
