noun
- Plural of oakum; loose fiber obtained by untwisting and picking apart old rope, used for caulking seams in wooden ships and for other purposes.
Usage: nautical; historical
Examples
- The sailors used oakums to seal the gaps between the wooden planks of the ship's hull.
- In the age of sail, oakums were essential for maintaining a watertight vessel.
- The old rope was shredded into oakums for the shipyard's caulking work.
- Oakums were traditionally made from discarded hemp and cotton ropes.
- The carpenter packed oakums into the seams before applying pitch.