English edit

Etymology edit

From French vaisseau rasé, from raser (to rase, to cut down ships). See raze and rase (verbs).

Noun edit

razee (plural razees)

  1. (nautical) An armed ship with its upper deck cut away, and thus reduced to the next inferior rate, such as a seventy-four cut down to a frigate.
    • 1838, Edmund Fanning, Voyages to the South Seas [] :
      an old line-of-battle ship, (21 years of age,) cut down to a razee

Verb edit

razee (third-person singular simple present razees, present participle razeeing, simple past and past participle razeed)

  1. (transitive, nautical) To cut (a ship) down to a smaller number of decks, and thus to an inferior rate or class.
  2. (transitive, figurative) To trim or abridge by cutting off parts.
    to razee a book, or an article

References edit

Anagrams edit