When I was pretty young, I learned that the accepted pronoun for ships (in English at least) is "she". I guess that this is because they are vessels, but it did get my mind racing about ideas like a ship being someone's mother (as explored in the Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack for comedic purposes, in which the "ship" was a whale) and later for me the idea of a captain being married to his ship. This usually manifested in my young mind as a starship with an advanced onboard AI.
Relationship, Mothership.
I considered making this Dragon Boat here have a Viking warrior instead of a colonial era pirate as her captain. I also considered the scifi angle but I was in a more fantastical mood at the time.
Keywords
male
1,268,399,
female
1,155,184,
dragon
158,649,
human
113,064,
male/female
104,144,
size difference
77,243,
straight
43,514,
female/male
31,452,
pirate
3,309,
smaller male
3,192,
ship
2,144,
larger female
2,062,
straight couple
1,381,
married
1,244,
married couple
1,193,
boat
958,
sailor
750,
sailing
142,
m/female
135,
male/f
125,
cutlass
117,
f/male
94,
female/m
90,
sail
64,
bridemonth2022
24,
bridemonth
23,
bicorne
5
Details
Published:
3 years, 9 months ago
19 Jun 2022 12:46 CEST
Initial: da1aa1c4f6f718c8f17f2781d3de546d
Full Size: 73d5f4126ce2eb7b097c76d61c6633f4
Large: 50be4a63ed28c7c285e37231e2dc73fa
Small: 96c6a14bede820537a6565b439055776
Stats
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4 favorites
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