Definitions for Bridges
Bridges
Bridg·es
Spelling: [brij-iz]
IPA: /ˈbrɪdʒ ɪz/
Bridges is a 7 letter English word.
It's valid Scrabble word worth 11 points.
It's valid Words with friends word worth 13 points.
You can make 200 anagrams from letters in Bridges (bdegirs).
Definitions for Bridges
noun
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Calvin Blackman [blak-muh n] /ˈblæk mən/ (Show IPA), 1889–1938, U.S. geneticist.
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Harry (Alfred Bryant Renton) [ren-tn] /ˈrɛn tn/ (Show IPA), 1900–1990, U.S. labor leader, born in Australia.
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Robert (Seymour) 1884–1930, English poet and essayist: poet laureate 1913–30.
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a structure spanning and providing passage over a river, chasm, road, or the like.
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a connecting, transitional, or intermediate route or phase between two adjacent elements, activities, conditions, or the like:
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Nautical.
a raised transverse platform from which a power vessel is navigated: often includes a pilot house and a chart house.
any of various other raised platforms from which the navigation or docking of a vessel is supervised.
a bridge house or bridge superstructure.
a raised walkway running fore-and-aft.
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Anatomy. the ridge or upper line of the nose.
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Dentistry. an artificial replacement, fixed or removable, of a missing tooth or teeth, supported by natural teeth or roots adjacent to the space.
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Music.
a thin, fixed wedge or support raising the strings of a musical instrument above the sounding board.
a transitional, modulatory passage connecting sections of a composition or movement.
(in jazz and popular music) the contrasting third group of eight bars in a thirty-two-bar chorus; channel; release.
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Also, bridge passage. a passage in a literary work or a scene in a play serving as a movement between two other passages or scenes of greater importance.
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Ophthalmology. the part of a pair of eyeglasses that joins the two lenses and rests on the bridge or sides of the nose.
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Also called bridge circuit. Electricity. a two-branch network, including a measuring device, as a galvanometer, in which the unknown resistance, capacitance, inductance, or impedance of one component can be measured by balancing the voltage in each branch and computing the unknown value from the known values of the other components.
Compare Wheatstone bridge.
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Railroads. a gantry over a track or tracks for supporting waterspouts, signals, etc.
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Building Trades. a scaffold built over a sidewalk alongside a construction or demolition site to protect pedestrians and motor traffic from falling materials.
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Metallurgy.
a ridge or wall-like projection of fire brick or the like, at each end of the hearth in a metallurgical furnace.
any layer of partially fused or densely compacted material preventing the proper gravitational movement of molten material, as in a blast furnace or cupola, or the proper compacting of metal powder in a mold.
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(in a twist drill) the conoid area between the flutes at the drilling end.
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Billiards, Pool.
the arch formed by the hand and fingers to support and guide the striking end of a cue.
a notched piece of wood with a long handle, used to support the striking end of the cue when the hand cannot do so comfortably; rest.
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transitional music, commentary, dialogue, or the like, between two parts of a radio or television program.
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Theater.
a gallery or platform that can be raised or lowered over a stage and is used by technicians, stagehands, etc., for painting scenery (paint bridge) arranging and supporting lights (light bridge) or the like.
British. a part of the floor of a stage that can be raised or lowered.
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Horology. a partial plate, supported at both ends, holding bearings on the side opposite the dial.
Compare cock1 (def 10).
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Chemistry. a valence bond illustrating the connection of two parts of a molecule.
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a support or prop, usually timber, for the roof of a mine, cave, etc.
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any arch or rooflike figure formed by acrobats, dancers, etc., as by joining and raising hands.
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a game derived from whist in which one partnership plays to fulfill a certain declaration against an opposing partnership acting as defenders.
Compare auction bridge, contract (def 5).
Idioms
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burn one's bridges (behind one), to eliminate all possibilities of retreat; make one's decision irrevocable:
adjective
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(especially of clothing) less expensive than a manufacturer's most expensive products:
verb (used with object)
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to make a bridge or passage over; span:
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to join by or as if by a bridge:
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to make (a way) by a bridge.
verb (used without object)
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Foundry. (of molten metal) to form layers or areas heterogeneous either in material or in degree of hardness.
Origin of Bridges
before 1000; Middle English brigge, Old English brycg; cognate with Dutch brug, German Brücke; akin to Old Norse bryggja pier
Examples for Bridges
Last year, over 214,000 workers were posted in Africa to build highways, Bridges, dams, and power plants.
Well, I think we won't talk about Bridges here, at any rate.
On the second day, Bridges asked the Boys if the relationship between the Dude and Walter progressed during the movie.
Next, the GOP should hammer away at how our roads, Bridges, and tunnels are crumbling, and push for an infrastructure initiative.
Ten Bridges were closed; the span linking Oakland to the City didn't reopen for more than a month.
Everybody lives on the river, the shores of which are united by ten Bridges.
There are between Omaha and Cheyenne but three Bridges worthy of the name.
The Bridges were narrow, and some time passed before the army could get over.
I think Bridges himself, from the beginning, it was his kids who had brought the book to him.
It builds the Bridges into the future, over which the feet of every one of us will go.