shoring

listen to the pronunciation of shoring
English - Turkish
destekleme
{f} destekle
iksa
payandalama
destekleyerek
payandayla destekleme
shore
kıyı

Mesire yeri kıyıya paraleldir. - The promenade is parallel to the shore.

Gemi kıyıya doğru gitti. - The ship made for the shore.

shore
{i} sahil

O 60 yaşında ve hala sahilde kumdan kaleler inşa eder. - He is 60 and still builds sand castles in the shore.

Sahile inmek için hâlâ çok soğuk. - It's still too cold to go down to the shore.

shoring information
iksa bilgileri
shoring wall
iksa duvarı
shore
{i} kara
shore
deniz kıyısı
shore
{i} dayanak
shore
takviye etmek
shore
kırak
shore
kuvvetlendirmek
shore
kenar
shore
destek

Şirketi desteklemeye çalışırken milyonlarca dolar harcandı. - Millions of dollars have been spent trying to shore up the company.

shore
desteklemek
shore
{f} destekle

Şirketi desteklemeye çalışırken milyonlarca dolar harcandı. - Millions of dollars have been spent trying to shore up the company.

ancillary shoring
(İnşaat) yardımcı iksa
shore
{i} payanda
shore
hudutsuz
shore
kıyısız
shore
{f} (fiyatları) desteklemek
shore
{f} (bir şeyin çökmesini önlemek için) bir tarafına destek koymak, desteklemek, payanda vurmak
shore
{f} up
shore
shore dinner deniz mahsullerinden ibaret yemek
shore
{f} kanıtlamak
shore
on shore karada
shore
off shore kıyıdan biraz uzak
shore
in shore kıyıya yakın
shore
{i} deniz kenarı
shore
{f} destek olmak
shore
açıkta
shore
{f} payanda vurmak
Turkish - Turkish

Definition of shoring in Turkish Turkish dictionary

shore
Flekso baskıda kullanılan klişelerin sertlik derecesi
English - English
Bracing used to temporarily prevent something, such as a tunnel, trench or ditch, from caving in
A term used in construction meaning the act of using wood or metal components to support and counteract imposed pressures either vertically or horizontally (trenching or excavations)
The act of supporting or strengthening with a prop or shore
a beam or timber that is propped against a structure to provide support
(Shoring system): means a structure such as a metal hydraulic, mechanical or timber shoring system that supports the sides of an excavation and which is designed to prevent cave-ins
the act of propping up with shores
A system of props; props, collectively
Bracing used to provide temporary support
Shore
A topographic surname
shore
Simple past of shear
shore
a prop or strut supporting the weight or flooring above it

The shores stayed upright during the earthquake.

shore
{v} to prop
shore
{n} a coast, drain, buttress, prop
shore
narrow strip of land in immediate contact with the sea
shore
support by placing against something solid or rigid; "shore and buttress an old building"
shore
the land
shore
To support by a shore or shores; to prop; usually with up; as, to shore up a building
shore
(Jane) Sir Thomas More says, “She was well-born, honestly brought up, and married somewhat too soon to a wealthy yeoman ” The tragedy of Jane Shore is by Nicholas Rowe
shore
a strut or prop placed against or beneath a structure to restrain movement
shore
That area of the land adjacent to the water which is above the high water mark and excludes land areas which are intermittently under water
shore
of Shear
shore
A post, plank, or other support used to brace a wall during alterations, set diagonally, as a buttress
shore
the land on or near a waterline such as a sea shore or lake shore
shore
A prop, as a timber, placed as a brace or support against the side of a building or other structure; a prop placed beneath anything, as a beam, to prevent it from sinking or sagging
shore
the land along the edge of a body of water
shore
To provide support in some way
shore
The land area bordering a relatively large water body like a lake or ocean
shore
A sewer
shore
arrive on shore; "The ship landed in Pearl Harbor"
shore
serve as a shore to; "The river was shored by trees"
shore
Falas
shore
comprised of
shore
To set on shore
shore
The shores or the shore of a sea, lake, or wide river is the land along the edge of it. Someone who is on shore is on the land rather than on a ship. They walked down to the shore. elephants living on the shores of Lake Kariba I have spent less time on shore than most men. A beam or timber propped against a structure to provide support. A past tense of shear
shore
obsolete, simple past of shear
shore
Related Topics: [wetlands] The term "shore" comes from the Old English word "scor", which means "to shear", or "to cut" This is an appropriate name for these areas Whether they occur at the edge of a river, the margin of a lake, or ocean beaches, it is these areas which receive the brunt of the water's shearing force Although many factors such as salinity, geography and the force with which flowing water strikes shore, it is probably substrate more than anything else which dictates the morphology of shoreline life
shore
That strip of ground bordering any body of water which is alternately exposed, or covered by TIDES and/or WAVES A SHORE of UNCONSOLIDATED material is usually called a BEACH
shore
{f} support with a post, reinforce with a beam
shore
a beam or timber that is propped against a structure to provide support the land along the edge of a body of water serve as a shore to; "The river was shored by trees
shore
{i} land alongside a body of water, beach; dry land as opposed to water; support beam, reinforcement, prop
shore
The coast or land adjacent to a large body of water, as an ocean, lake, or large river
shore
The horizontal distance, measured in a straight line, between the intersections of the lot lines with the shoreline at "normal high-water line," as defined in this Ordinance
shore
a beam or timber that is propped against a structure to provide support
shore
The process of temporarily supporting a structure or structural member with auxiliary members
shoring
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