Idioms for sail

Origin of sail

before 900; (noun) Middle English sail(e), seille, Old English segl; cognate with German Segel, Old Norse segl; (v.) Middle English seillen, saylen, Old English siglan, seglian; cognate with Dutch zeilen, Old Norse sigla

OTHER WORDS FROM sail

sail·a·ble, adjective sail·less, adjective un·sail·a·ble, adjective un·sailed, adjective

British Dictionary definitions for set sail

sail
/ (seɪl) /

noun

verb (mainly intr)

Derived forms of sail

sailable, adjective sailless, adjective

Word Origin for sail

Old English segl; related to Old Frisian seil, Old Norse segl, German Segel

Idioms and Phrases with set sail (1 of 2)

set sail

Also, make sail. Begin a voyage on water, as in Dad rented a yacht, and we're about to set sail for the Caribbean, or We'll make sail for the nearest port. These expressions, dating from the early 1500s, originally meant “put the sails in position to catch the wind,” and hence cause the vessel to move.

Idioms and Phrases with set sail (2 of 2)

sail