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The nautical star is an informal signifier indicating membership in the United States Coast Guard, United States Navy, or United States Marine Corps. The symbol recalls both the five-pointed star of the US national flag and the color pattern of the compass rose found on many nautical charts. Insignia including nautical stars:
A common compass rose as found on a nautical chart showing both true north (using a nautical star symbol) and magnetic north with magnetic variation.Also notice the correspondence between the 32-point rose (inner circle) and the modern 0–360° graduations.
Because the nautical star can consist of any two contrasting colors, the symbol is better rendered in monochrome. Also, I cleaned up the way the vertices meet in the center and increased the width of the border and the symbol's overall size. 19:43, 7 November 2006: 500 × 500 (4 KB) Grendelkhan
Of these, 58 stars are known in the field of navigational astronomy as "selected stars", including 19 stars of the first magnitude, 38 stars of the second magnitude, and Polaris. [1] The selection of the stars is made by His Majesty's Nautical Almanac Office and the US Naval Observatory , in the production of the yearly Nautical Almanac which ...
In the 19th century Admiral William Henry Smyth, writing in his nautical lexicon The Sailor's Word-Book, described Friday as The Dies Infaustus, on which old seamen were desirous of not getting under weigh, as ill-omened. [6] (Dies Infaustus means "unlucky day". [7]) This superstition is the root of the well-known urban legend of HMS Friday.
The ensign of the United States is the flag of the United States when worn as an ensign (a type of maritime flag identifying nationality, usually flown from the stern of a ship or boat, or from an installation or facility of the United States Navy, United States Marine Corps, United States Coast Guard or the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration ashore). [1]
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.
Sailor tattoo motifs had already solidified by the early 19th century, with anchors, ships, and other nautical symbols being the most common images tattooed on American seafarers, followed by patriotic symbols such as flags, eagles, and stars; symbols of love; and religious symbols. [5]: 532–3