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freestanding
/ ˌfriːˈstændɪŋ /
adjective
standing apart; not attached to or supported by another object
(in systemic grammar) denoting a clause that can stand alone as a sentence; denoting or being a main clause Compare bound 1
Word History and Origins
Origin of freestanding1
Example Sentences
The damaged signal box, built in 1872, is Grade II-listed and is only a small number on the British network that is attached to a terraced house rather than freestanding.
Eight machine gun vehicle mounts, seven freestanding machine gun tripods, medical equipment, 40 pairs of binoculars and 18 bayonets also went missing from the facility, police said.
Most are freestanding, she added, “and don’t have other lines of income to keep us afloat.”
In the exhibition, a cycle of elemental return and fundamental waste unfolds in slides projected from an automated tray onto an ordinary freestanding screen.
They arranged the exhibition around a central gallery that features a plain rainbow of light arcing across a freestanding back wall.
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