Exact(5)
In the original, the entire box was referred to as Ship of Theseus.
The pity of it, as Ship of Fools points out, is that the boom years were largely squandered.
In 1494, the German humanist Sebastian Brant published an allegorical satire whose title was later translated into English as "Ship of Fools".
The performance in between is bracingly unsentimental and forward-looking, recasting 1970s classics such as "Ship of Fools" with loops and raps.
Even that year there were classics such as Ship of Fools and Doctor Zhivago.
Similar(55)
The "GodPod," as Ship-of-Fools.com calls this player, is aimed squarely at bringing digital Jesus to the developing world — it's solar-powered, meaning the prayerful will no longer have to choose between clean water and batteries to power the word of the Lord.
New methods for collecting data, such as ships-of-opportunity and remote sensing, provide additional information to the traditional shipboard sampling.
He returned to Istanbul on Nov. 13, 1919, just as ships of the Allied fleet sailed up the Bosporus.
The main fighting ships of the fleet were known as ships of the line; these were two-deckers or three-deckers with heavy broadside armament as well as heavy timbers in their walls to keep out enemy shot.
The line of battle favored very large ships that could hold the line in the face of heavy fire, later known as ships of the line.
The convoy commander Commodore Nathaniel Dance had disguised several of the East Indiamen as ships of the line in the hope of convincing Linois that the convoy was well protected.
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