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flying buttress
noun
a segmental arch transmitting an outward and downward thrust to a solid buttress that through its inertia transforms the thrust into a vertical one.
flying buttress
noun
Also called: arc-boutant. a buttress supporting a wall or other structure by an arch or part of an arch that transmits the thrust outwards and downwards
flying buttress
An external, arched support for the wall of a church or other building. Flying buttresses were used in many Gothic cathedrals (see also cathedral); they enabled builders to put up very tall but comparatively thin stone walls, so that much of the wall space could be filled with stained-glass windows. The cathedrals of Chartres and Notre Dame de Paris were built with flying buttresses.
Word History and Origins
Origin of flying buttress1
Example Sentences
Through the centuries, the cathedral’s windows were widened and the flying buttresses reconstructed.
Its tall branches tower above me like flying buttresses, its wide canopy is a sanctuary.
And then there is the structure itself, with its towering walls of stone, its flying buttresses and its weird populace of gargoyles and grotesques watching the city from on high.
Giant palm trunks were to be flying buttresses for multiple roofs, which were to be sheathed in pandanus leaves.
MisheGOTHIC ARCHITECTURE: Pointy arches, ribbed vaults, stained glass, flying buttresses — enough already!
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