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.

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.

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.

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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.

  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).