Buttress And Flying Buttress

Flying Buttress (formerly BrickHouse) is a shareware app that puts a nicer GUI front end on Apple’s built-in firewall and provides access to features otherwise available only through the Terminal ...

The meaning of BUTTRESS is a projecting structure of masonry or wood for supporting or giving stability to a wall or building. How to use buttress in a sentence.

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Buttresses are fairly common on more ancient (typically Gothic) buildings, as a means of providing support to act against the lateral (sideways) forces arising out of inadequately braced roof structures.

What is a Buttress in Construction? Buttresses are (although not exclusively) a type of structure built against or projecting from a wall to stabilise it and resist lateral loads.

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To buttress an argument, system, or person means to give them support and strength.

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us / ˈbʌ trəs / a structure made of stone or brick that sticks out from and supports a wall of a building (Definition of buttress from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

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Definition of buttress noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

buttress, in architecture, exterior support, usually of masonry, projecting from the face of a wall and serving either to strengthen it or to resist the side thrust created by the load on an arch or a roof.

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  1. To support or reinforce with a buttress. 2. To sustain, prop, or bolster: "The author buttresses her analysis with lengthy dissections of several of Moore's poems" (Warren Woessner).