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All cantilevered synonyms

can·ti·le·ver
C c

noun cantilevered

  • beamed — any of various relatively long pieces of metal, wood, stone, etc., manufactured or shaped especially for use as rigid members or parts of structures or machines.
  • bailed — Also, bailer. a bucket, dipper, or other container used for bailing.
  • balked — to stop, as at an obstacle, and refuse to proceed or to do something specified (usually followed by at): He balked at making the speech.
  • bolstered — a long, often cylindrical, cushion or pillow for a bed, sofa, etc.
  • boomed — to sail at full speed.
  • braced — something that holds parts together or in place, as a clasp or clamp.
  • lathed — a thin, narrow strip of wood, used with other strips to form latticework, a backing for plaster or stucco, a support for slates and other roofing materials, etc.
  • piled — having a pile, as velvet and other fabrics.
  • pillared — an upright shaft or structure, of stone, brick, or other material, relatively slender in proportion to its height, and of any shape in section, used as a building support, or standing alone, as for a monument: Gothic pillars; a pillar to commemorate Columbus.
  • poled — a long, cylindrical, often slender piece of wood, metal, etc.: a telephone pole; a fishing pole.
  • posted — Chiefly British. a single dispatch or delivery of mail. the mail itself. the letters and packages being delivered to a single recipient. an established mail system or service, especially under government authority.
  • propped — to support, or prevent from falling, with or as if with a prop (often followed by up): to prop an old fence; to prop up an unpopular government.
  • shafted — a long pole forming the body of various weapons, as lances, halberds, or arrows.
  • sparred — a motion of sparring.
  • stayed — (of a ship) to change to the other tack.
  • stripped — having had a covering, clothing, equipment, or furnishings removed: trees stripped of their leaves by the storm; a stripped bed ready for clean sheets.
  • strutted — to walk with a vain, pompous bearing, as with head erect and chest thrown out, as if expecting to impress observers.
  • studded — a boss, knob, nailhead, or other protuberance projecting from a surface or part, especially as an ornament.
  • timbered — made of or furnished with timber.
  • armed — Someone who is armed is carrying a weapon, usually a gun.
  • banded — If something is banded, it has one or more bands on it, often of a different colour which contrasts with the main colour.
  • barred — having bars or stripes
  • blocked — If something is blocked or blocked up, it is completely closed so that nothing can get through it.
  • bracketed — a support, as of metal or wood, projecting from a wall or the like to hold or bear the weight of a shelf, part of a cornice, etc.
  • buttressed — any external prop or support built to steady a structure by opposing its outward thrusts, especially a projecting support built into or against the outside of a masonry wall.
  • gripped — the act of grasping; a seizing and holding fast; firm grasp.
  • guyed — a rope, cable, or appliance used to guide and steady an object being hoisted or lowered, or to secure anything likely to shift its position.
  • levered — Mechanics. a rigid bar that pivots about one point and that is used to move an object at a second point by a force applied at a third. Compare machine (def 4b).
  • pegged — a pin of wood or other material driven or fitted into something, as to fasten parts together, to hang things on, to make fast a rope or string on, to stop a hole, or to mark some point.
  • ribbed — one of a series of curved bones that are articulated with the vertebrae and occur in pairs, 12 in humans, on each side of the vertebrate body, certain pairs being connected with the sternum and forming the thoracic wall.
  • skidded — a plank, bar, log, or the like, especially one of a pair, on which something heavy may be slid or rolled along.
  • staffed — a group of persons, as employees, charged with carrying out the work of an establishment or executing some undertaking.
  • trussed — close (def 54).
  • jointed — shared by or common to two or more: a joint obligation.
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