English

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Watercolor by Edward Lear of Egyptian dahabeeyas, gyassis, and nuggers. The boat depicted above and to the right of the statue is a dahabeeya.

Noun

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dahabeeya (plural dahabeeyas)

  1. A large, slow, flat-bottomed boat with a sail at one end, used on the Nile river for carrying passengers, hauling cargo, or as a houseboat.
    • 1922, The Auk - Volume 39, page 153:
      Together they organized an expedition by dahabeeya down the Nile, where they did considerable shooting and Cory made important additions to his collection of birds.
    • 1992, Martin R. Kalfatovic, Nile Notes of a Howadji, page 243:
      Engaging William Prime's (q.v.) dragoman, he visits the bazaars, mosques, and Pyramids before sailing in the dahabeeya Rip Van Winkle up the Nile.
    • 2010, Barbara M. Moskaitis, The Eye of the Lioness:
      They had gone on foot just for the chance to be free of the confines of the constantly rolling rhythm of the dahabeeya.