Word Meanings - INTERJOIST - Book Publishers vocabulary database
1. The space or interval between two joists. Gwilt. 2. A middle joist or crossbeam. De Colange.
Related words: (words related to INTERJOIST)
- INTERVALLUM
An interval. And a' shall laugh without intervallums. Shak. In one of these intervalla. Chillingworth. - MIDDLE
1. Equally distant from the extreme either of a number of things or of one thing; mean; medial; as, the middle house in a row; a middle rank or station in life; flowers of middle summer; men of middle age. 2. Intermediate; intervening. - SPACE
One of the intervals, or open places, between the lines of the staff. Absolute space, Euclidian space, etc. See under Absolute, Euclidian, etc. -- Space line , a thin piece of metal used by printers to open the lines of type to a regular distance - INTERVAL
Difference in pitch between any two tones. At intervals, coming or happening with intervals between; now and then. "And Miriam watch'd and dozed at intervals." Tennyson. -- Augmented interval , an interval increased by half a step or half a tone. - MIDDLE-GROUND
That part of a picture between the foreground and the background. - MIDDLE-EARTH
The world, considered as lying between heaven and hell. Shak. - MIDDLEMAN
The man who occupies a central position in a file of soldiers. (more info) 1. An agent between two parties; a broker; a go-between; any dealer between the producer and the consumer; in Ireland, one who takes land of the proprietors in large tracts, - MIDDLER
One of a middle or intermediate class in some schools and seminaries. - MIDDLE-AGE
Of or pertaining to the Middle Ages; mediæval. - MIDDLEMOST
Being in the middle, or nearest the middle; midmost. - JOIST
A piece of timber laid horizontally, or nearly so, to which the planks of the floor, or the laths or furring strips of a ceiling, are nailed; -- called, according to its position or use, binding joist, bridging joist, ceiling joist, trimming joist, - SPACE BAR; SPACE KEY
A bar or key, in a typewriter or typesetting machine, used for spacing between letters. - INTERVAL; INTERVALE
A tract of low ground between hills, or along the banks of a stream, usually alluvial land, enriched by the overflowings of the river, or by fertilizing deposits of earth from the adjacent hills. Cf. Bottom, n., 7. The woody intervale just beyond - BETWEEN
betweónum; prefix be- by + a form fr. AS. twa two, akin to Goth. 1. In the space which separates; betwixt; as, New York is between Boston and Philadelphia. 2. Used in expressing motion from one body or place to another; from one to another of - SPACELESS
Without space. Coleridge. - SPACEFUL
Wide; extensive. Sandys. - CROSSBEAM
A girder. - MIDDLE-AGED
Being about the middle of the ordinary age of man; between 30 and 50 years old. - DISPACE
To roam. In this fair plot dispacing to and fro. Spenser. - GO-BETWEEN
An intermediate agent; a broker; a procurer; -- usually in a disparaging sense. Shak. - HYPERSPACE
An imagined space having more than three dimensions. - ANCHOR SPACE
In the balk-line game, any of eight spaces, 7 inches by 3½, lying along a cushion and bisected transversely by a balk line. Object balls in an anchor space are treated as in balk.