Bridging the divide between the police and those who distrust them will take more than protests and symbolic gestures.
How to Solve the Policing Crisis|Keli Goff|January 5, 2015|DAILY BEAST
The best, or at least most successful, are bridging the gap between punk-rock DIY ethos and social-media savvy.
On Tour With The Head and the Heart, Indie Rock’s Next Big Thing|James Joiner|December 17, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Bridging the world of The Patty Duke Show and Mary Tyler Moore, That Girl was a game changer.
Comedians and Feminism Getting Laughs|Agunda Okeyo|October 23, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Phillips and her co-authors suggest that work activities may be better-suited than social ones for bridging racial divides.
Office Parties Are Bad for Business|Jesse Singal|December 19, 2013|DAILY BEAST
He talks about bridging the much-discussed military-and-civilian divide.
A Night Along the Military-Civilian Divide: An Iraq Vet in New York|Matt Gallagher|April 30, 2013|DAILY BEAST
The corners of Figure 222 are, however, slightly accented by means of the bridging spots x-x.
Industrial Arts Design|William H. Varnum
His plans for bridging the Thames may be referred to in proof of his patriotic devotedness to improvement.
The Modern Scottish Minstrel, Volume V.|Various
She was glad to aid in bridging the chasm between north and south.
The Harris-Ingram Experiment|Charles E. Bolton
The moon is bridging Loon Lake, and the whip-poor-will is crying.
The Harvester|Gene Stratton Porter
It needs no argument to demonstrate the value of any movement that has for its purpose the bridging of the gulf.
Chapters in Rural Progress|Kenyon L. Butterfield
British Dictionary definitions for bridging
bridging
/ (ˈbrɪdʒɪŋ) /
noun
one or more timber struts fixed between floor or roof joists to stiffen the construction and distribute the loads
mountaineeringa technique for climbing a wide chimney by pressing left hand and foot against one side of it and right hand and foot against the other side
rugby Unionan illegal move in which a player leans down and forward onto the body of a prone player in a ruck, thereby preventing opposing players from winning the ball by fair rucking