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A beam or timber that is propped against a structure to provide support
Answer for the clue "A beam or timber that is propped against a structure to provide support ", 7 letters:
shoring
Alternative clues for the word shoring
Word definitions for shoring in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. Temporary bracing used to prevent something, such as a tunnel, trench, or wall, from collapse. vb. (present participle of shore English)
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Shoring \Shor"ing\, n. The act of supporting or strengthening with a prop or shore. A system of props; props, collectively.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Shoring is the process of supporting a building, vessel, structure, or trench with shores (props) when in danger of collapse or during repairs or alterations. Shoring comes from shore a timber or metal prop. Shoring may be vertical, angled, or horizontal. ...
Usage examples of shoring.
Several uncut lengths of eight-by-twelve lumber lay nearby and were probably intended for permanently shoring up the porch.
Anastasius pretended to check the timbers and shoring, while Valentinian gave the Bihari miners and their remaining Ye-tai guards that level and dark-eyed stare that could intimidate a demon.
Two repair artificials wandered past, paying no heed to Hresh and Taniane as they went about their solemn work of poking through the rubble and shoring up the swaying walls.
Massive efforts in shoring up the levees and careful manipulation of the barriers and dams prevented the Ganges from turning the lower portion of Bangladesh into a vast lagoon from Bogra to the sea.
They clicked and clacked when we showed them where we'd located the new lodes, and the next thing they had adit, shafts and quotas all drawn out for us, and the quantities of materials they'd need for shoring, what track, carts, cranes, stuff they evidently knew they didn't have to bring.
Everywhere the silt encroached, shoring itself in huge banks against a railway viaduct or crescent of offices, oozing through a submerged arcade like the fetid contents of some latter-day Cloaca Maxima.
In the center of the room the shoring pole was bowed a good thirty centimeters out of line in response to the newly convex shape of the ceiling.
A silhouetted figure stepped into the display from starboard, pointing forward to the ragged, blasted edges of the hull where crews in battlesuits focused unwieldy, hoselike N-ray projectors on the blazing hullmetal while others dragged massive shoring clamps to secure shattered ribs and longerons from further damage.
Ambrose Spike had reported some minor splintering at the top inside edges of the door, but the shoring of earthworks was holding out.
I suspect that Louis knows he may soon see a sworn enemy sitting on the throne of England, and is making ready to out-flank that foe by shoring up relations with places such as Ireland, Scotland, and that flyspeck of rock where I was born.
Structurally because of the Herculean construction efforts that had gone into rebuilding and shoring it up with hardened steel, representatively because of the great awakening that was occurring in the nation despite the circumstances.
A sea squirt was shoring himself up with the flow from an undersea fresh-water spring, getting tipsy on the rare liquid.
The old fool of an Abbot and his stupid devoted band of creatures were all outside, shoring up gatehouses, drilling, fetching, carrying and generally being good and useful.
But instead of shoring up the tunnel with iron-supported timbers and lining it with masonry-hardened brick, the walls of the tunnel were composed of mud-and-straw bricks similar to those used to construct a house.
They're still shoring up the hole it left in the wall, but the floor shows not the smallest chip or crack.