A galleon is made for transporting things and has cannons, but it is made to transport items. But, a frigate is a warship. It doesn't transport as much and is made for naval warfare.
I believe the frigate is better. It packs more guns, and is only 2 less cargo spaces than a galleon. It is a bit faster and can turn better. Brig is good ,too!
Frigates are smaller than destroyers
a caravel is bigger that it and is from the norther part of the world and a galleons is smaller and is from the southern part of the world
English galleon were physically smaller and less heavily armoured but more than a match gun-for-gun. In addition, English galleon were less top heavy, faster and more maneuverable.
Another name for a ship is a vessel. What about Boat? Barque? Sloop? Trireme? Galleon? Quinqureme? etc Brig, Brigantine, Fluyt, Schooner, Clipper, Barquentine, Cog, Steamer, Frigate,
Frigate birds that have fledged weigh between 1.5 and 3.5 pounds. The average adult weighs about 3 pounds.
in Naval terminology, adestroyer is a fast and maneuverable yet long-endurance ship intended to escort larger vessels in a fleet.a Corvette is a small, manoeuvrable, lightly armed warship, originally smaller than a frigate and larger than a coastal Patrol shipA frigate (pronounced frigit) is a warship. The term has been used for warships of many sizes and roles over the past few centuries.
No, the = USS Constellation = is a frigate.
frigate
galleon
A Galleon was a large full rigged sailing ship having three or four masts and used primally as a warship or trader between the 15th and 18th Century
A Galley is a low-freeboard narrow-beam warship powered primarily by oars, though usually with sails for cruising. Galley primarily refers to warships built and used in the Mediterranean and includes the galley warships on antiquity through to the venetian galleys of the 16th century which were armed with cannons at the bow. A Galleon meanwhile is a high-freeboard broad-beamed multi-decked sailing ship built from the 16th-18th centuries, developed from the earlier carrack by Iberian shipbuilders. Galleons could be used either as trade ships or as warships, and unlike galleys were able to carry a broadside armament of cannon, allowing far superior firepower by comparison, meanwhile the high sides made boarding much more difficult. If you want a ship which is a combination of the two, that would be called a Galleass, which is similar to a galley in that it is a narrow-beam primarily oar-powered ship, but with the features of a galleon, including a full gun deck, high superstructure, and full sail rig. the Galleass was developed from the venetian galley by Italian shipbuilders in the 16th century. A similar ship type would be developed later on by the Royal Navy in the late 17th century which they called the Galley Frigate, essentially an oar-powered frigate.