strap
Kelime Anlamı :

1. kayışla bağlamak.
2. Saat kordonu.
3. band.
4. askısı.
5. halka.
6. ekleme parçası.
7. levha.
8. sapan.
9. askı yeri.
10. askılık.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Eş Anlamlı Kelimeler :
Tanımlar :
1. to fasten or bind with a strap: especially in the sense of compressing and holding very closely: often with up or down.
2. to beat or chastise with a strap.
3. to sharpen with a strap; strop, as a razor.
4. to hang.
5. A narrow strip of leather or other flexible material, generally used for some mechanical purpose, as to surround and hold together, or to retain in place. ,
6. A long and narrow piece of thin iron or other metal used to hold different parts together, as of a frame or the sides of a box; a leaf of a hinge; in carpentry, an iron plate for connecting two or more timbers, to which it is bolted or screwed.
7. in botany, the ligule in florets of Compositæ (see ligule); also, in some grasses, the leaf exclusive of its sheath.
8. A string.
9. credit; originally, credit for drink.
10. in a vehicle: A plate on the upper side of the tongue and resting upon the doubletree, to aid in holding the wagou-hammer.
11. A clip, such as that which holds a spring to the spring-bar or to the axle.
12. the stirrupshaped piece of a clevis.
13. A strap-oyster.
14. in machinery: the narrow band which surrounds the disk of a steam-engine eccentric and forms the bearing-surface for the eccentric-rod. it is usually separate from the latter and bolted to it, generally in two parts to permit adjustment for wear.
15. an enveloping band of steel, somewhat U-shaped, which passes around the outside of the brasses at the ends of a steam-engine connecting-rod, and, by means of bolts, wedges, and gib and key, makes a solid unit of the connecting-rod end or stub, while providing for easy adjustment or renewal as wear occurs upon the bearings on the pins.
16. in iron ship-building, a narrow-strip of plate or a bar with a wide flange used to unite two parts to each of which the strap is riveted. see also butt-strap and seam-strap.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia