Hello,
I stumbled (again) on the definition of "Boot" and "Schiff" in German military context when there was a discussion in Germany to classify the new corvettes of the K130 class ("Braunschweig"-class) either as "Schiffe" or "Boote" (they are now "Boote"). But German bureocratic correctness always made a sensitive difference in official naming. For example destroyers were "Boote" in WW I (Große Torpedoboote) while they were "Schiffe" in WWII due to the much larger complement and therefore deeper officer structure.
In fact "Boot" and "Ship" are direct translation of the English terms, but the meaning differ in the field of "rated". As a general term, submarines are always named "U-Boot", regardless of their size as standard naming convention.
I checked the Gröner (Erich Gröner: Die deutschen Kriegsschiffe 1815-1945 Band 3) for Uschiffe: Pr. 42 were considered Uschiffe (completed U136, U136 in 1918) Pr.46 (U139-U141 1918), U151-U157 (former trading submarines), Type IX (! Nickname "Atlantikboot" against their classification) since 1936, Type X, the "Seekühe": Type XIV-XVI (Supply boats) and in fact type XXI.
Best regards
Dietmar
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