Meaning BRIDGING
What does BRIDGING mean? Here you find 26 meanings of the word BRIDGING. You can also add a definition of BRIDGING yourself

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BRIDGING


Small wood or metal members that are inserted in a diagonal position between floor joists at midspan to act as both tension and compression members for the purpose of bracing the joists and spreading [..]
Source: nachi.org

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BRIDGING


Bridging, or a bridge loan, is short-term financing made available pending the arrangement of intermediate or long-term financing.
Source: glossary.reuters.com (offline)

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BRIDGING


Structural members used between beams to strengthen the structure.
Source: golfandhome.co (offline)

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BRIDGING


A condition of filter element loading in which contaminant spans the space between adjacent sections of a filter element, thus blocking a portion of the useful filtration.
Source: machinerylubrication.com

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BRIDGING


Small wood or metal members that are inserted in a diagonal position between the floor joists at midspan to act both as tension and compression members for the purpose of bracing the joists and spread [..]
Source: beaufortonline.com

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BRIDGING


A part of using different treatments techniques where the patient wants to try one thing and the therapist would rather try a more effective treatment.
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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BRIDGING


n. in multimodal therapy, refers to a transition made from the first course of treatment preferred by the client to another method of treatment which the therapist deems more effective.
Source: psychologydictionary.org

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BRIDGING


Bracing or system of bracing used between joists or other structural members to stiffen them and thereby distribute a load.
Source: metalsales.us.com

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BRIDGING


Short wood or metal braces or struts placed crosswise between joists to help keep them in alignment. Bridging may be solid or crossed struts. Back to Top
Source: wooduniversity.org

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BRIDGING


Loans
Source: sterlingcapitalreserve.co.uk

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BRIDGING


munitio
Source: latin-dictionary.org (offline)

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BRIDGING


Small wood or metal members that are inserted in a diagonal position between the floor joists or rafters at mid-span for the purpose of bracing the joists/rafters & spreading the load.
Source: homebuildingmanual.com (offline)

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BRIDGING


Structural members used between beams to strengthen the structure.
Source: nauticalwavesrealty.com

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BRIDGING


is the undesired closing of open contacts caused by a metallic bridge or protrusion developed by arcing causing the melting and resolidifying of the contact metal.
Source: standexelectronics.com

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BRIDGING


Small wood or metal pieces placed diagonally between floor joists.
Source: publications.usa.gov

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BRIDGING


Small wood or metal members that are inserted in a diagonal position between the floor joists at mid span to act both as tension and compression members for the purpose of bracing the joists and sprea [..]
Source: thehouseplanshop.com

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BRIDGING


In general, is a member connected to a joist to brace it from lateral movement. See Horizontal Bridging and Diagonal Bridging.
Source: hancockjoist.com (offline)

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BRIDGING


A characteristic of undercoat performance that occurs when a scratch or surface imperfection is not …
Source: goautopaint.com

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BRIDGING


A teacher helping students make connections between what they are studying and real-life, out-of-school experiences.
Source: crossroad.to

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BRIDGING


When a high impedance video line is paralleled to a video source, this is known as bridging.
Source: secure2ware.com (offline)

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BRIDGING


A malformation that is characterized by a Muscle bridge over a segment of the CORONARY Arteries. Systolic contractions of the Muscle bridge can Lead to narrowing of coronary Artery; coronary compressi [..]
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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BRIDGING


Bridging is a technique used for message forwarding in packet switched networks. In contrast to routing, bridging uses the destination address placed inside the message header to locate unknown networ [..]
Source: techopedia.com

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BRIDGING


Combining two network segments (for example, one segment connected to a wired Ethernet port and another connected wirelessly) as if they were one network. An Ethernet bridge does not use routing, but rather, relies on broadcasting to communicate between the two segments. So, this is a good way to share broadcast services, such as a Samba server, be [..]
Source: archive.oreilly.com (offline)

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BRIDGING


Material-handling problem characterized by the particulate forming a cavity over the discharge or opening of a hopper or storage vessel.
Source: menardifilters.com (offline)

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BRIDGING


A brace, or a system of braces, placed between joists to stiffen them, prevent twisting and help distribute the load.
Source: bdma.org.uk

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BRIDGING


The linking of local, community based plans with statutory planning at local authority or regional level.
Source: communityplanning.net





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