Online Google Dictionary

arched 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/ärCH/,
Font size:

arches, 3rd person singular present; arched, past tense; arching, present participle; arched, past participle;
  1. Have the curved shape of an arch
    • - a beautiful bridge that arched over a canal
  2. Form or cause to form the curved shape of an arch
    • - her eyebrows arched in surprise
    • - she arched her back
  3. Provide (a bridge, building, or part of a building) with an arch
    • - high arched windows
  4. Span (something) by or as if by an arch
    • - the vine arched his evening seat

  1. constructed with or in the form of an arch or arches; "an arched passageway"
  2. arced: forming or resembling an arch; "an arched ceiling"
  3. An arch is a structure that spans a space while supporting weight (e.g. a doorway in a stone wall). Arches appeared as early as the 2nd millennium BC in Mesopotamian brick architecture and their systematic use started with the Ancient Romans who were the first to apply the technique to a wide ...
  4. To have made curved; Curved
  5. (Arching) Brickwork or stonework forming the roof of any underground roadway.
  6. (Arching) Fracture processes around a mine opening, leading to stabilization by an arching effect.
  7. (Arching) In the case of a buried structure, it is the tendency for the soil particles to lock together in the form of an arch, with the result that part of the stress is transmitted around the structure instead of through it.
  8. (Arching) Occasionally used as descriptive of the same phenomenon as the term "hogging."
  9. (Arching) Skidding logs or trees using a mounted or trailing arch (8).
  10. (Arching) The transfer of stress from a yielding part of a soil or rock mass to adjoining less-yielding or restrained parts of the mass.
  11. (arching) shaping done on the outside of the front and back
  12. Signifies that an ordinary on an escutcheon is bent or bowed. (Sometimes called archy.)
  13. the underside of the lintel has an overall upward convex curvature such as a catenary or arch.