释义 |
buttress
but·tress B0585100 (bŭt′rĭs)n.1. A structure, usually brick or stone, built against a wall for support or reinforcement.2. Something resembling a buttress, as:a. The flared base of certain tree trunks.b. A horny growth on the heel of a horse's hoof.3. Something that serves to support, prop, or reinforce: "The law is by its very nature a buttress of the status quo" (J. William Fulbright).tr.v. but·tressed, but·tress·ing, but·tress·es 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). [Middle English buteras, from Old French bouterez, from bouter, to strike against, of Germanic origin; see bhau- in Indo-European roots.]buttress (ˈbʌtrɪs) n1. (Architecture) Also called: pier a construction, usually of brick or stone, built to support a wall. See also flying buttress2. any support or prop3. something shaped like a buttress, such as a projection from a mountainside4. (Zoology) either of the two pointed rear parts of a horse's hoofvb (tr) 5. (Building) to support (a wall) with a buttress6. to support or sustain[C13: from Old French bouterez, short for ars bouterez thrusting arch, from bouter to thrust, butt3]but•tress (ˈbʌ trɪs) n. 1. a projecting support built into or against the outside of a masonry wall to steady a structure by opposing its outward thrusts. 2. any prop or support. 3. something resembling a buttress in shape or position. 4. a bony or horny protuberance, esp. on a horse's hoof. v.t. 5. to support by a buttress; prop up. 6. to give encouragement or support to. [1350–1400; Middle English butres « Old French (arc) boterez thrusting (arch)] buttress Past participle: buttressed Gerund: buttressing
Imperative |
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buttress | buttress |
Present |
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I buttress | you buttress | he/she/it buttresses | we buttress | you buttress | they buttress |
Preterite |
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I buttressed | you buttressed | he/she/it buttressed | we buttressed | you buttressed | they buttressed |
Present Continuous |
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I am buttressing | you are buttressing | he/she/it is buttressing | we are buttressing | you are buttressing | they are buttressing |
Present Perfect |
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I have buttressed | you have buttressed | he/she/it has buttressed | we have buttressed | you have buttressed | they have buttressed |
Past Continuous |
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I was buttressing | you were buttressing | he/she/it was buttressing | we were buttressing | you were buttressing | they were buttressing |
Past Perfect |
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I had buttressed | you had buttressed | he/she/it had buttressed | we had buttressed | you had buttressed | they had buttressed |
Future |
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I will buttress | you will buttress | he/she/it will buttress | we will buttress | you will buttress | they will buttress |
Future Perfect |
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I will have buttressed | you will have buttressed | he/she/it will have buttressed | we will have buttressed | you will have buttressed | they will have buttressed |
Future Continuous |
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I will be buttressing | you will be buttressing | he/she/it will be buttressing | we will be buttressing | you will be buttressing | they will be buttressing |
Present Perfect Continuous |
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I have been buttressing | you have been buttressing | he/she/it has been buttressing | we have been buttressing | you have been buttressing | they have been buttressing |
Future Perfect Continuous |
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I will have been buttressing | you will have been buttressing | he/she/it will have been buttressing | we will have been buttressing | you will have been buttressing | they will have been buttressing |
Past Perfect Continuous |
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I had been buttressing | you had been buttressing | he/she/it had been buttressing | we had been buttressing | you had been buttressing | they had been buttressing |
Conditional |
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I would buttress | you would buttress | he/she/it would buttress | we would buttress | you would buttress | they would buttress |
Past Conditional |
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I would have buttressed | you would have buttressed | he/she/it would have buttressed | we would have buttressed | you would have buttressed | they would have buttressed | ThesaurusNoun | 1. | buttress - a support usually of stone or brick; supports the wall of a buildingbuttressingarc-boutant, flying buttress - a buttress that stands apart from the main structure and connected to it by an archsupport - supporting structure that holds up or provides a foundation; "the statue stood on a marble support" | Verb | 1. | buttress - reinforce with a buttress; "Buttress the church"reenforce, reinforce - make stronger; "he reinforced the concrete" | | 2. | buttress - make stronger or defensible; "buttress your thesis"beef up, fortify, strengthen - make strong or stronger; "This exercise will strengthen your upper body"; "strengthen the relations between the two countries" |
buttressnoun1. support, shore, prop, brace, pier, reinforcement, strut, mainstay, stanchion, stay, abutment a buttress of rockverb1. support, sustain, strengthen, shore, prop, reinforce, back up, brace, uphold, bolster, prop up, shore up, augment His tough line is buttressed by a democratic mandate.buttressnounA means or device that keeps something erect, stable, or secure:brace, crutch, prop, shore, stay, support, underpinning.verbTo present evidence in support of:back (up), corroborate, substantiate.Translationsbuttress (ˈbatris) noun a support built on to the outside of a wall. 扶壁,撐牆 扶垛,扶壁 IdiomsSeebuttress upbuttress
buttress, mass of masonry built against a wall to strengthen it. It is especially necessary when a vault or an arch places a heavy load or thrust on one part of a wall. In the case of a wall carrying the uniform load of a floor or roof, it is more economical to buttress it at certain intervals than to make the entire wall thicker. Even when a wall carries no load, it is usually buttressed rather than uniformly thickened. For a load-bearing brick wall more than 8 ft (2 m) high a buttress is used every 20 ft (6 m). The decorative possibilities of the buttress were discovered in the ancient temples at Abu Shahrein in Mesopotamia (3500–3000 B.C.), where they were used both as utilitarian and decorative forms. The Romans employed buttresses, which sometimes projected from the exteriors of the walls and were then left as mere piles of masonry, without architectural treatment. But in the large structures, such as basilicas and baths, the buttresses that received the thrusts from the main vaulting were confined to the interior of the building, where they served also as partition walls. The basilica of Constantine in Rome (A.D. 312) exemplifies this arrangement. In the medieval church, the groined vaults, concentrating their great lateral thrusts at points along the exterior walls, required buttresses as an essential element to achieve stability. Beginning with Romanesque architecture about A.D. 1000, a steady evolution of buttresses can be traced, from the simple, slightly projecting piers of the 11th cent. to the bold and complex Gothic examples of the 13th, 14th, and 15th cent. Builders in England, Germany, and N France achieved striking architectural effects. They devised the flying buttress, an arch of masonry abutting against the wall of the nave; the thrust of the nave vault could thus be received and transferred to the vertical buttress built against the outside walls of the side aisles. These flying arches, at first concealed beneath the roofs, began to be exposed outside the roofs in the mid-12th cent. Later they were enriched with gables, stone tracery, and sculpture and were topped with pinnacles to give them extra weight. They constitute, especially in such French cathedrals as Amiens, Beauvais, and Notre-Dame de Paris, the true expression of the elasticity and equilibrium which were the basic principles of the Gothic structural system.ButtressAn exterior mass of masonry projecting from the wall to absorb the lateral thrusts from roof vaults; either unbroken in their height or broken into stages, with a successive reduction in their projection and width. The offsets dividing these stages are generally sloped at a very acute angle. They terminate at the top with a plain slope ending at the wall or with a triangular pediment. angle buttressOne of the two buttresses at right angles to each other; forming the corner of a structure.  diagonal buttressA buttress that bisects the 270-degree angle at the outside corner of a building. flying buttressA characteristic feature of Gothic construction in which the lateral thrusts of a roof or vault are carried by a segmental masonry arch, usually sloping, to a solid pier or support that is sufficiently massive to receive the thrust.   Buttress a transverse wall, a vertical projection or rib that reinforces the main supporting structure (primarily the outer wall of a building) and absorbs the horizontal pressure (the thrust from the arched ceiling, the pressure of the earth against the retaining walls, hydrostatic pressure against the foundation of a dam). The cross section usually increases toward the base of the wall (smoothly or with ledges). Against small horizontal thrusts, the cross sections can remain at one height. Buttresses can be made out of stone, concrete, or reinforced concrete. The stone buttress was one of the principal elements of Gothic structures. Buttresses are widely used to reinforce walls during the restoration of architectural monuments. buttress[′bə·trəs] (architecture) An upright projection that supports or resists lateral forces in a building. (botany) A ridge of wood developed in the angle between a lateral root and the butt of a tree. (civil engineering) A pier constructed at right angles to a restraining wall on the side opposite to the restrained material; increases the strength and thrust resistance of the wall. (paleontology) A ridge on the inner surface of a pelecypod valve which acts as a support for part of the hinge. buttress buttresses An exterior mass of masonry set at an angle to or bonded into a wall which it strengthens or supports; buttresses often absorb lateral thrusts from roof vaults. Also see flying buttress, hanging buttress.buttress1. a construction, usually of brick or stone, built to support a wall 2. either of the two pointed rear parts of a horse's hoof buttress
buttress (lip'ō-oks'ĭ-jen-ās), A structure placed against the base of another to support or stabilize it. [M.E. buteras, fr. O. Fr. bouterez, fr. Germanic] FinancialSeePierbuttress Related to buttress: flying buttressSynonyms for buttressnoun supportSynonyms- support
- shore
- prop
- brace
- pier
- reinforcement
- strut
- mainstay
- stanchion
- stay
- abutment
verb supportSynonyms- support
- sustain
- strengthen
- shore
- prop
- reinforce
- back up
- brace
- uphold
- bolster
- prop up
- shore up
- augment
Synonyms for buttressnoun a means or device that keeps something erect, stable, or secureSynonyms- brace
- crutch
- prop
- shore
- stay
- support
- underpinning
verb to present evidence in support ofSynonyms- back
- corroborate
- substantiate
Synonyms for buttressnoun a support usually of stone or brickSynonymsRelated Words- arc-boutant
- flying buttress
- support
verb reinforce with a buttressRelated Wordsverb make stronger or defensibleRelated Words |