0 a three-cornered sail on the front mast of a ship. -- fok
1 the jutting-out arm of a crane. -- kranarm
I do not know whether we should jib at the word.
I say "a certain amount": some of them do jib a bit at the present restrictions.
What we have seen in the last few months—indeed, the last couple of years—is that we jib at the price we have to pay.
During the same time the jib, boiler, and machinery will be in course of construction.
I should not have thought he need jib at this comparatively modest alteration.
A great deal has been done to screen the jib and it has been done every day to an increasing extent.
No wonder that the leaders jibbed and then broke away, leaving the coach in the middle of the road, but still unbroken.
It would perhaps be pedantic for me to jib at the word "global".