What is the meaning of vice in "as in a vice"?



I'm having trouble finding a definition of vice that explains its usage in the following NYTimes article:



The Monarch, no less boldly than her compeer, dashed among the rebel fleet, and singling out the Lovell, under full speed struck her fairly near the wheel, her prow crashing far into the hull, and remaining for a moment fastened as in a vice.



The closest meaning I could find is "vise" (British vice), which in the Oxford Dictionaries means:



a metal tool with movable jaws that are used to hold an object firmly in place while work is done on it, typically attached to a workbench.




Answer



Vise or Vice, a tool that can apply enormous squeezing pressure.


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