Definition von (bridge) im Englisch Englisch wörterbuch
- pons
- Bailey bridge
- a portable pre-fabricated truss bridge, designed for use by military engineering units
- Einstein-Rosen bridge
- A type of wormhole, originally predicted by physicists Albert Einstein & Nathan Rosen, that is inherently unstable and collapses before any information or matter can pass through
- Golden Gate Bridge
- A 1.7 mile long suspension bridge linking Marin County, California, to San Francisco, California
- Kelvin bridge
- a specialized form of a Wheatstone bridge network designed to eliminate the effect of lead and contact resistance and thus permit accurate measurement of low resistances
- Mabey bridge
- a portable pre-fabricated truss bridge, designed for use by military engineering units. A recent development from the older Bailey bridge
- Maryland bridge
- Dental prosthetic replacing a missing tooth by a bridging piece which is glued to the backs of the adjacent teeth (as opposed to an ordinary dental bridge which is attached by grinding down the adjacent teeth and covering them). The Maryland Bridge is considered to be an ultra-conservative treatment with minimal grinding of the adjoining teeth
- Stamford Bridge
- the home stadium of Chelsea Football Club
- Stamford Bridge
- Chelsea Football Club itself
- Wheatstone bridge
- An instrument used to measure an unknown electrical resistance by balancing two legs of a bridge circuit, one leg of which includes the unknown component
- air bridge
- A link established by air transport between two points inaccessible by land; a continuing airlift
Berliners referred to both missions as die Luftbrucke - the air bridge..
- bridge
- A statement, such as an offer, that signals a possibility of accord
- bridge
- An elevated platform above the upper deck of a mechanically propelled ship from which it is navigated and from which all activities on deck can be seen and controlled by the captain, etc; smaller ships have a wheelhouse, and sailing ships were controlled from a quarterdeck
The first officer is on the bridge.
- bridge
- A particular form of one hand placed on the table to support the cue when making a shot in cue sports
- bridge
- A cue modified with a convex arch-shaped notched head attached to the narrow end, used to support a player's (shooter's) cue for extended or tedious shots. Also called a spider
- bridge
- A construction or natural feature that spans a divide
The rope bridge crosses the river.
- bridge
- An unintended solder connection between two or more components or pins
- bridge
- The upper bony ridge of the human nose
Rugby players often break the bridge of their noses.
- bridge
- A card game played normally with four players playing as two teams of two players each
Bidding is an essential element of the game Bridge.
- bridge
- A song contained within another song, often demarcated by meter, key, or melody
The lyrics in the song's bridge inverted its meaning.
- bridge
- A rudimentary procedure before definite solution
ECMO is used as a bridge to surgery to stabilize the patient.
- bridge
- Any of several electrical devices that measure characteristics such as impedance and inductance by balancing different parts of a circuit
- bridge
- To transition from one piece or section of music to another without stopping
We need to bridge that jam into The Eleven.
- bridge
- An intramolecular valence bond, atom or chain of atoms that connects two different parts of a molecule; the atoms so connected being bridgeheads
- bridge
- To be or make a bridge over something
With enough cable, we can bridge this gorge.
- bridge
- The piece, on string instruments, that supports the strings from the sounding board
- bridge
- A system which connects two or more local area networks at layer 2
The LAN bridge uses a spanning tree algorithm.
- bridge
- A device which connects two or more computer buses, typically in a transparent manner
This chip is the bridge between the front-side bus and the I/O bus.
- bridge
- A prosthesis replacing one or several adjacent teeth
The dentist pulled out the decayed tooth and put in a bridge.
- bridge
- To span as if with a bridge
The two groups were able to bridge their differences.
- bridge
- An edge which, if removed, changes a connected graph to one that is not connected
- bridge mount
- a sight mount with a strong metal frame between the rings, used on large caliber rifles to negate the affects of recoil on accuracy
- bridge railing
- A guard railing
- bridge spider
- a large orb-weaver often found on bridges and near water, ''Larinioides sclopetarius
- bridge too far
- A step or action that is too ambitious; an act of overreaching
Cloning was an interesting concept. Cloning body parts was again just man's search for immortality riding on the back of naive altruistic medicinal benevolence. But cloning a person was a bridge too far.
- bus bridge
- A temporary system of shuttle buses bypassing a failure in some other mode of transit
A bus bridge is being put in place for the stations affected by the recent train derailment.
- bus bridge
- A device for connecting two disparate hardware buses
- catenary bridge
- a bridge in which the horizontal deck in suspended from a reverse catenary to counteract bending
- contract bridge
- A card game in which four players, forming two partnerships, first bid then play by taking tricks
- covered bridge
- A bridge with a (usually wooden) house-like structure covering it, to protect it from the elements
- cross a bridge before one comes to it
- To worry about a future situation despite being as yet unable to act on it
- cross that bridge when one comes to it
- To deal with a problem or situation only when it arises
It's possible we'll someday have more content than available space for it, but we'll cross that bridge when we come to it.
- cross that bridge when one gets there
- Alternative form of cross that bridge when one comes to it
- cross that bridge when one gets to it
- Alternative form of cross that bridge when one comes to it
- draw bridge
- Alternative spelling of drawbridge
- flying bridge
- A (usually open) area on top of, or at the side of, a ship's pilothouse, serving as an operating station for the officers in good weather or when manoeuvring in port
- gold bridge
- An escape route
- land bridge
- in biogeography: an isthmus or other land connection between what at other times are separate land masses
- land bridge
- Travel by ferry from one country, via another country by road, then by another ferry crossing to a third country. An example is from Ireland by ferry to the UK, by road to the opposite coast, then ferry to France
- oblique bridge
- a skew bridge
- packhorse bridge
- A narrow bridge with low parapets so as not to interfere with the panniers of a packhorse
- rainbow bridge
- The road between the realm of the gods and the realm of men in Heathenry which appears in the form of a rainbow
- rubber bridge
- The original form of contract bridge; so called because bonuses are awarded for scoring sufficient points to win games and thereby a rubber which is the best of 3 games
- sleep under the same bridge
- a critique of a law where circumstances are ignored
- sleep under the same bridge
- To be formally, but not actually, equal under the law
The equally enforced prohibition not to sleep under the same bridge does not signify the reign of equlaity but rather its opposite for those without homes.
- suspension bridge
- A bridge where the deck or roadway is suspended from cables that pass over two towers
- third bridge guitar
- A stringed musical instrument, with three bridges, played at the inverse side with the fingers or a plectrum (guitar pick)
- toll bridge
- a bridge at which a toll is charged for passage
- transporter bridge
- a type of movable bridge that carries a segment of roadway across a river
- trestle bridge
- a bridge supported on a system of trestles
- water under the bridge
- Something in the past that cannot be controlled or undone, but must be accepted, forgiven, or forgotten
They agreed that their old disputes were water under the bridge and decided to make a fresh start.
- bridge
- {v} to form a bridge over
- bridge
- {n} a building to pass over water on, passage, part of the nose or of a violin
- Intercellular bridge
- (Biyoloji) A cell junction (also called homophilic binding or intercellular bridge ) is a type of structure that exists within the tissue of a multicellular organism. They consist of protein complexes and provide contact between neighbouring cells, between a cell and the extracellular matrix, or they build up the paracellular barrier of epithelia and control the paracellular transport. Cell junctions are especially abundant in epithelial tissues
- cantilever bridge
- A bridge formed by two projecting beams or trusses that are joined in the center by a connecting member and are supported on piers and anchored by counterbalancing members
- cross that bridge when one comes to it
- (deyim) Deal with a problem or situation only when it arises
It's possible we'll someday have more content than available space for it, but we'll cross that bridge when we come to it.
- cross that bridge when you come to it
- (deyim) If you will cross that bridge when you come to it, you will deal with a problem when it arises, but not until that point
- diminishing bridge
- (Oyunlar) Oh Hell (also known as Up the River, Hell Yeah!, Stinky Fingers, Get Fred, Gary's Game, Diminishing Bridge, Shit On Your Neighbor, Kari's Lane, German Bridge in Hong Kong, and many variations of "Oh Hell" with euphemisms and other swearwords) is a trick-taking card game in which the object is to take exactly the number of tricks bid, unlike contract bridge and spades, where taking more tricks than bid is a loss. Its first appearance dates to the early 1930s and is sometimes credited to Geoffrey Mott-Smith
- german bridge in honk kong
- (Oyunlar) Oh Hell (also known as Up the River, Hell Yeah!, Stinky Fingers, Get Fred, Gary's Game, Diminishing Bridge, Shit On Your Neighbor, Kari's Lane, German Bridge in Hong Kong, and many variations of "Oh Hell" with euphemisms and other swearwords) is a trick-taking card game in which the object is to take exactly the number of tricks bid, unlike contract bridge and spades, where taking more tricks than bid is a loss. Its first appearance dates to the early 1930s and is sometimes credited to Geoffrey Mott-Smith
- monkey bridge
- (Denizcilik) A small raised platform above a bridge, deck-house, etc., on a ship; monkey island
- rainbow bridge
- Rainbow Bridge a bridge of natural rock, the world's largest natural bridge, situated in southern Utah, just north of the border with Arizona. Its span is 86 m (278 ft)
- rainbow bridge
- A metaphorical or mythological place often referred to by people whose pets have died, where the pets await reunion with their owners
- sky bridge
- A cable-stayed bridge
- suspension bridge
- Bridge that is suspended from steel cables
- water under the bridge
- (deyim) Problems that someone has had in the past that they do not worry about because they happened a long time ago and cannot now be changed: "Yes, we did have our disagreements but that's water under the bridge now."
- water under the bridge
- (deyim) The past, history. -That failure is water under the bridge. Let's not live in the past
- waterloo bridge
- Waterloo Bridge is a road and foot traffic bridge crossing the River Thames in London, England between Blackfriars Bridge and Hungerford Bridge. The name of the bridge is in memory of the British victory at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815. Thanks to its location at a strategic bend in the river, the views of London (Westminster, the South Bank and London Eye to the west, the City of London and Canary Wharf to the east) from the bridge are widely held to be the finest from any spot at ground level