释义 |
cam·ber I. \ˈkambə(r), -aam-\ verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: French cambrer, from Middle French cambre curved intransitive verb : to bend or curve upward toward the middle transitive verb : to cut, bend, or fashion to a slight convex curve : arch slightly < above and athwartships ran a narrow platform, heavily cambered and naked to the weather — Thomas Wood †1950 > II. noun (-s) Etymology: obsolete camber, adjective, curved, from obsolete French cambre, from Latin camur — more at chamber 1. a. : a slight convexity, arching, or curvature (as of a beam, a deck, or a road) b. : the greatest perpendicular distance in a semielliptical spring from an imaginary line drawn through the centers of the spring eyes to the top of the master leaf or to the bottom of the short plate c. : the convexity or rise of the curve of an airfoil from its chord : the ratio of the maximum departure of this curve from the chord to the length of the chord 2. : a setting of the front wheels of an automotive vehicle closer together at the bottom than at the top < excessive camber prevents the tire from having correct contact with the road — Joseph Heitner > 3. : a superficial geological structure induced during erosion, the strata dipping downward from hilltops toward adjacent valleys |