| bridge |
Location on the ship that serves as a command and control station.
Ãâó: www.geocities.com/batdev/glossary.html
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|---|---|
| bridge |
The part of eyeglasses that extends across the nose.
Ãâó: www.allaboutvision.com/resources/glossary.htm
|
| bridge |
a device for passing signals between two LANs or two segments of a LAN.
Ãâó: www.micro2000uk.co.uk/network_glossary.htm
|
| bridge |
On a stringed instrument, the bridge is mounted on the instrument body. The strings, held by the tail piece, pass over the bridge and are suspended over the neck until they pass over the nut.
Ãâó: www.songstuff.com/glossary/B
|
| bridge |
To leave one group of riders and join another one that is further ahead.
Ãâó: www.athens2004.com/en/Glossary_RoadCycling
|
| bridge | a circuit consisting of two branches (4 arms arranged in a diamond configuration) across which a meter is connected |
|---|---|
| bridge | an upper deck where a ship is steered and the captain stands |
| bridge | the cards held in a game of bridge |
| bridge | connect or reduce the distance between |
| bridge | suffice for a period between two points |
| bridge | one of a pair of bridge players who are on the same side of the game |
| bridge | a card player in a game of bridge |
| bridge | the earliest form of bridge |
| bridge | capable of being connected by a bridge or as if by a bridge |
| bridge | a circuit consisting of a T-network with an additional shunt bridging the two series circuits |
| bridge | a defensive post at the end of a bridge nearest to the enemy |
| bridge | an area in hostile territory that has been occupied and is held for further troops and supplies |
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