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Cantalever

 - 3 dictionary results

can⋅ta⋅le⋅ver

[kan-tl-ee-ver, -ev-er]
–noun, verb (used without object), verb (used with object)
cantilever.
Also, can⋅ta⋅li⋅ver [kan-tl-ee-ver] .

can⋅ti⋅le⋅ver

[kan-tl-ee-ver, -ev-er]
–noun
1. any rigid structural member projecting from a vertical support, esp. one in which the projection is great in relation to the depth, so that the upper part is in tension and the lower part in compression.
2. Building Trades, Civil Engineering. any rigid construction extending horizontally well beyond its vertical support, used as a structural element of a bridge (cantilever bridge), building foundation, etc.
3. Aeronautics. a form of wing construction in which no external bracing is used.
4. Architecture. a bracket for supporting a balcony, cornice, etc.
–verb (used without object)
5. to project in the manner of a cantilever.
–verb (used with object)
6. to construct in the manner of a cantilever.
Also, cantalever, cantaliver.


Origin:
1660–70; perh. cant 2 + -i- + lever
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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Word Origin & History

cantilever 
1667, probably from cant (2) + lever, but earliest form (c.1610) was cantlapper. First element also may be Sp. can "dog," architect's term for an end of timber jutting out of a wall, on which beams rested.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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