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Jib

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See also: Jib (television)

A jib is a triangular staysail set ahead of the foremost mast of a sailing boat. Its tack is fixed to the bowsprit, to the bow, or to the deck between the bowsprit and the foremost mast.

Jibs and spinnakers are the two main types of headsails on a modern yacht.

Confusingly, any jib is technically a staysail, but the inner jib of a yacht with two jibs is called the staysail, and the outer (foremost) the jib. This combination of two jibs is called a cutter rig or a yankee pair. A yacht with one mast rigged with two jibs and a mainsail is called a cutter.

A fully rigged schooner has three jibs. The foremost one sets on the topmast forestay and is called the jib topsail, a second on the main forestay is called the jib, and the innermost is called the staysail. All three sails are both jibs and staysails in the generic sense.

On yachts with only one jib, it is common for the clew of the jib to be further aft than the mast, meaning the jib and mainsail overlap. An overlapping jib is called a genoa jib or simply a genoa.

On cruising yachts, it is common for the innermost jib to be self-tacking, either by using a boom along the foot of the sail, or by cleating the [[sheet (sailing)|sheet] to a track, or both. On other cruising yachts, and nearly all racing sailboats, the jib need to be worked when tacking. On these yachts, there are two sheets attached to the clew of the jib. As the yacht comes head to wind during a tack, the active sheet is released, and the the other sheet (the lazy sheet) on the other side of the yacht is pulled in. This sheet becomes the new active sheet until the next tack.

The word 'jib' exists in most English-speakers' vocabularies only in the idiom 'to like the cut of one's jib', meaning 'to like (of a person)'.

Also a snowboarding term meaning to grind.

See also sail-plan.