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overhanging - 2 dictionary results

o⋅ver⋅hang

[v. oh-ver-hang; n. oh-ver-hang] verb, -hung, -hang⋅ing, noun
–verb (used with object)
1. to hang or be suspended over: A great chandelier overhung the ballroom.
2. to extend, project, or jut over: A wide balcony overhangs the garden.
3. to impend over or threaten, as danger or evil; loom over: The threat of war overhung Europe.
4. to spread throughout; permeate; pervade: the melancholy that overhung the proceedings.
5. Informal. to hover over, as a threat or menace: Unemployment continues to overhang the economic recovery.
–verb (used without object)
6. to hang over; project or jut out over something below: How far does the balcony overhang?
–noun
7. something that extends or juts out over; projection.
8. the extent of projection, as of the bow of a ship.
9. Informal. an excess or surplus: an overhang of office space in midtown.
10. a threat or menace: to face the overhang of foreign reprisals.
11. Architecture. a projecting upper part of a building, as a roof or balcony.

Origin:
1590–1600; over- + hang
o·ver·hang   (ō'vər-hāng')   
v.   o·ver·hung (-hŭng'), o·ver·hang·ing, o·ver·hangs

v.   tr.
  1. To project or extend beyond.
  2. To loom over: The threat of nuclear war overhangs modern society.
  3. To ornament with hangings.
v.   intr.
To project over something that lies beneath. See Synonyms at bulge.
n.   (ō'vər-hāng')
  1. A projecting part, such as an architectural structure or a rock formation.
  2. An amount of projection: an overhang of six inches.
  3. Nautical The part of a bow or stern that projects over the water.
  4. A supply of a commodity in excess of what can easily be disposed of: An unusually warm winter created an overhang in oil stocks.
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