Mon compte

connexion

inscription

   Publicité R▼


 » 
allemand anglais arabe bulgare chinois coréen croate danois espagnol espéranto estonien finnois français grec hébreu hindi hongrois islandais indonésien italien japonais letton lituanien malgache néerlandais norvégien persan polonais portugais roumain russe serbe slovaque slovène suédois tchèque thai turc vietnamien
allemand anglais arabe bulgare chinois coréen croate danois espagnol espéranto estonien finnois français grec hébreu hindi hongrois islandais indonésien italien japonais letton lituanien malgache néerlandais norvégien persan polonais portugais roumain russe serbe slovaque slovène suédois tchèque thai turc vietnamien

Significations et usages de Tower

Définition

tower (n.)

1.a tower that supports or shelters a bell

2.a structure taller than its diameter; can stand alone or be attached to a larger building

3.a powerful small boat designed to pull or push larger ships

4.anything that approximates the shape of a column or tower"the test tube held a column of white powder" "a tower of dust rose above the horizon" "a thin pillar of smoke betrayed their campsite"

5.tower consisting of a multistoried building of offices or apartments"`tower block' is the British term for `high-rise'"

tower (v.)

1.appear very large or occupy a commanding position"The huge sculpture predominates over the fountain" "Large shadows loomed on the canyon wall"

   Publicité ▼

Merriam Webster

TowerTow"er (?), n. [OE. tour,tor,tur, F. tour, L. turris; akin to Gr. �; cf. W. twr a tower, Ir. tor a castle, Gael. torr a tower, castle. Cf. Tor, Turret.]
1. (Arch.) (a) A mass of building standing alone and insulated, usually higher than its diameter, but when of great size not always of that proportion. (b) A projection from a line of wall, as a fortification, for purposes of defense, as a flanker, either or the same height as the curtain wall or higher. (c) A structure appended to a larger edifice for a special purpose, as for a belfry, and then usually high in proportion to its width and to the height of the rest of the edifice; as, a church tower.

2. A citadel; a fortress; hence, a defense.

Thou hast been a shelter for me, and a strong tower from the enemy. Ps. lxi. 3.

3. A headdress of a high or towerlike form, fashionable about the end of the seventeenth century and until 1715; also, any high headdress.

Lay trains of amorous intrigues
In towers, and curls, and periwigs.
Hudibras.

4. High flight; elevation. [Obs.] Johnson.

Gay Lussac's tower (Chem.), a large tower or chamber used in the sulphuric acid process, to absorb (by means of concentrated acid) the spent nitrous fumes that they may be returned to the Glover's tower to be reemployed. See Sulphuric acid, under Sulphuric, and Glover's tower, below. -- Glover's tower (Chem.), a large tower or chamber used in the manufacture of sulphuric acid, to condense the crude acid and to deliver concentrated acid charged with nitrous fumes. These fumes, as a catalytic, effect the conversion of sulphurous to sulphuric acid. See Sulphuric acid, under Sulphuric, and Gay Lussac's tower, above. -- Round tower. See under Round, a. -- Shot tower. See under Shot. -- Tower bastion (Fort.), a bastion of masonry, often with chambers beneath, built at an angle of the interior polygon of some works. -- Tower mustard (Bot.), the cruciferous plant Arabis perfoliata. -- Tower of London, a collection of buildings in the eastern part of London, formerly containing a state prison, and now used as an arsenal and repository of various objects of public interest.

TowerTow"er (?), v. i. [imp. & p. p. towered (?); p. pr. & vb. n. towering.] To rise and overtop other objects; to be lofty or very high; hence, to soar.

On the other side an high rock towered still. Spenser.

My lord protector's hawks do tower so well. Shak.

TowerTow"er, v. t. To soar into. [Obs.] Milton.

   Publicité ▼

Définition (complément)

⇨ voir la définition de Wikipedia

Synonymes

Voir aussi

tower (n.)

tug

Locutions

Absa Tower • Allan Tower Waterman • BT Tower • Bank of America Tower (Miami) • Bank of America Tower (New York City) • Bank of China Tower, Hong Kong • Bank of the West Tower (Albuquerque) • Beaumont Tower • Bell-tower • Belvédère tower • Beyazıt Tower • Bishopsgate Tower • Black Tower • Bloomberg Tower • Blumenthal Observation Tower • Burton Memorial Tower • CN Tower • Cabot Tower (Newfoundland) • Carnegie Hall Tower • Castle Tower National Park • Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came • Chuderhüsi Tower • Clifton Hill Shot Tower • Clock Tower (series) • Colpatria Tower • Commerzbank Tower • Constable of the Tower • Coops (Melbourne Central) Shot Tower • Dead-end tower • Devil's Tower • Devil's Tower national monument • Devils Tower National Monument • Dom Tower of Utrecht • Dork Tower • Drochtersen Shot Tower • Eichberg Tower • Eiffel Tower • Eugen-Keidel Tower • Federation Tower • Fenwick Tower • Fenwick Tower (Halifax) • Fox Tower • Galata Tower • Gediminas' Tower • Gehry Tower • Girl in the Tower • Goethe Tower • Grand Tower, Illinois • Gulf Tower • Għajn Tuffieħa Tower • Għallis Tower • HSBC Tower, New York • HSBC Tower, New York City • Hall of the Tower • Hassan Tower • Hawker Hunter Tower Bridge incident • Haymarket Memorial Clock Tower • Hearst Tower (New York City) • Hercules Tower • Heron Tower • High Clerist's Tower • Hot Springs Mountain Tower • Huqiu Tower • Irish round tower • Ivory Tower • Ivory Tower (1956 song) • Jackson Ferry Shot Tower • Jested Tower • Joan of The Tower • Juche Tower • KCBS-TV/FM Tower • KGTV Tower • KSWB-TV Tower • Ka (Dark Tower) • Koppers Tower • Kriegsberg Tower • Lake Point Tower • LeVeque Tower • Leaning Tower of Nevyansk • Leaning Tower of Pisa • Leverkusen-Bürrig water tower • Light Tower Mosque • London Borough of Tower Hamlets • Loyola Residence Tower • Lurie Tower • Macau Tower • Mamo Tower • Marine Tower Yokohama • Mesquite Tower • Metropolitan Tower (New York) • Millennium Tower (London) • Miller Bell Tower • Montjuic Communications Tower • Montjuic Tower • Moonlight tower • Mouse Tower • Mumbai Television Tower • Muztagh Tower • Mühlacker Water Tower • NS-Tower • New Brighton Tower F.C. • Nobel Tower • ODS Tower (Portland, Oregon) • Observation Tower Burgholzhof • Observation tower • Olympic Tower (New York) • Peel tower • Phoenix Shot Tower • Prague - Žižkov Television Tower • Princes in the Tower • Pyongyang TV Tower • Qawra Tower • Radiating tower • Radio Tower Dudelange • Rajabai Tower • Reception Tower Utlandshörn • Rockwell Automation Headquarters and Allen-Bradley Clock Tower • Round Tower of Copenhagen • Royal Trust Tower • Russia Tower • Sapphire Tower • Sather Tower • Schapfen-Mill-Tower • Shebeli Tower • Shorewood-Tower Hills-Harbert, Michigan • Shot tower • Siege tower • Silver Tower (Frankfurt) • Sky Tower • Smith Tower • Solar tower • St Lucian Tower • St Thomas Tower • Stark Tower • Strong Tower • Sun Tower • Suspension tower • Söyembikä Tower • TD Tower (Halifax) • TOWER Software • TV Tower Vinnytsia • Tatlin's Tower • Telecommunications tower • Teltschik Tower • The Chinese High School Clock Tower Building • The Dark Tower • The Fourth Tower of Inverness • The Iron Tower • The Round Tower of Copenhagen • The Tower of Druaga • The Tower of the Elephant • Tokyo Tower • Tower (transmission line) • Tower 42 • Tower Automotive • Tower Bridge • Tower City, North Dakota • Tower City, Pennsylvania • Tower Commission • Tower Hamlets parks and open spaces • Tower Hill (London) • Tower Hill (disambiguation) • Tower Hill School • Tower Hill, Illinois • Tower Hill, London • Tower Of Babel (computer game) • Tower Rock • Tower Train Museum • Tower acid • Tower and stockade • Tower block • Tower mill • Tower mustard • Tower of Babel • Tower of High Sorcery • Tower of Kamyanyets • Tower of London • Tower of Nona • Tower of Siloam • Tower of Terror (movie) • Tower of the Winds • Tower, Minnesota • Traffic tower • Treasure in the Royal Tower • Tribune Tower • Trump International Hotel and Tower (New York) • Trump Tower • US Bancorp Tower • Victoria Tower Gardens • Vienna Twin Tower • WITI TV Tower • WNWO tower • Wardenclyffe Tower • Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania • Water tower • Willis Tower • Yellow Crane Tower • Yoot Tower • Zizkov Television Tower

Dictionnaire analogique

Wikipedia

Tower

                   
  CN Tower (world's fifth tallest freestanding structure) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
  Tower in Islamic architecture: old minaret (8th–9th century) of the Mosque of Uqba also known as the Great Mosque of Kairouan, city of Kairouan, Tunisia
  Roman tower in Cologne with decorative inlay
  Sky Tower tower in Auckland, New Zealand is the tallest free-standing structure in the southern hemisphere and is part of the World Federation of Great Towers
  Typical modern water tower in Carmel, Indiana, United States.
  El Faro towers in Buenos Aires, Argentina, one of the tallest constructions in the city.

A tower is a tall structure, usually taller than it is wide, often by a significant margin. Towers are distinguished from masts by their lack of guy-wires.

Towers are generally built to take advantage of their height, and can stand alone on the ground, or as part of a larger structure or device such as a fortified building or as an integral part of a bridge, the term also denoting a raised structure on a ship or other vehicle.

Contents

  History

Towers have been used by mankind since prehistoric times. The oldest known may be the circular stone tower in walls of Neolithic Jericho (8000 BC). Some of the earliest towers were ziggurats, which existed in Sumerian architecture since the 4th millennium BC. The most famous ziggurats include the Sumerian Ziggurat of Ur, built the 3rd millennium BC, and the Etemenanki, one of the most famous examples of Babylonian architecture. The latter was built in Babylon during the 2nd millennium BC and was considered the tallest tower of the ancient world.

Some of the earliest surviving examples are the broch structures in northern Scotland, which are conical towerhouses. These and other examples from Phoenician and Roman cultures emphasised the use of a tower in fortification and sentinel roles. For example, watchtower elements are found at Mogador from the first millennium BC, derived from Phoenician or Carthaginian origins. The Romans utilised octagonal towers[1] as elements of Diocletian's Palace in Croatia, which monument dates to approximately 300 AD, while the Servian Walls (4th century BC) and the Aurelian Walls (3rd century AD) featured square ones. The Chinese used towers as integrated elements of the Great Wall of China in 210 BC during the Qin Dynasty. Towers were also an important element of castles.

Another well known tower is the Leaning Tower of Pisa in Pisa, Italy built from 1173 until 1372. The Himalayan Towers are stone towers located chiefly in Tibet built approximately 14th to 15th century. [2]

  Etymology

Old English torr is from Latin turris via Old French tor. The Latin term together with Greek τύρσις was loaned from a pre-Indo-European Mediterranean language, connected with the Illyrian toponym Βου-δοργίς. With the Lydian toponyms Τύρρα, Τύρσα, it has been connected with the ethnonym Τυρρήνιοι as well as with Tusci (from *Turs-ci), the Greek and Latin names for the Etruscans (Kretschmer Glotta 22, 110ff.)

  Mechanics

Up to a certain height, a tower can be made with the supporting structure with parallel sides. However, above a certain height, the compressive load of the material is exceeded and the tower will fail. This can be avoided if the tower's support structure tapers up the building.

A second limit is that of buckling- the structure requires sufficient stiffness to avoid breaking under the loads it faces, especially those due to winds. Many very tall towers have their support structures at the periphery of the building, which greatly increases the overall stiffness.

A third limit is dynamic; a tower is subject to varying winds, vortex shedding, seismic disturbances etc. These are often dealt with a combination of simple strength and stiffness, as well as in some cases tuned mass dampers to damp out movements. Varying or tapering the outer aspect of the tower with height avoids vibrations due to vortex shedding occurring along the entire building simultaneously.

  Functions

  Skyscrapers

A modern type of tower, the skyscraper, uses less ground space as a ratio of total building interior square footage. Skyscrapers are often not classified as towers, although most have the same design and structure of towers. In the United Kingdom, tall domestic buildings are referred to as tower blocks. In the United States, the World Trade Center had the nickname the Twin Towers, a name shared with the Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur. A tower has very deep foundations.

  Strategic advantages

The tower throughout history has provided its users with an advantage in surveying defensive positions and obtaining a better view of the surrounding areas, including battlefields. They were installed on defensive walls, or rolled near a target (see siege tower). Today, strategic-use towers are still used at prisons, military camps, and defensive perimeters.

  Potential energy

By using gravity to move objects or substances downward, a tower can be used to store items or liquids like a storage silo or a water tower, or aim an object into the earth such as a drilling tower. Ski-jump ramps use the same idea, and in the absence of a natural mountain slope or hill, can be human-made.

  Communication enhancement

In history, simple towers like lighthouses, bell towers, clock towers, signal towers and minarets were used to communicate information over greater distances. In more recent years, radio masts and cell phone towers facilitate communication by expanding the range of the transmitter. The CN Tower in Toronto, Canada was built as a communications tower, with the capability to act as both a transmitter and repeater. Its design also incorporated features to make it a tourist attraction, including the world's highest observation deck at 147 stories.[citation needed]

  Transportation support

Towers can also be used to support bridges, and can reach heights that rival some of the tallest buildings above-water. Their use is most prevalent in suspension bridges and cable-stayed bridges. The use of the pylon, a simple tower structure, has also helped to build railroad bridges, mass-transit systems, and harbors.

Control towers are used to give visibility to help direct aviation traffic.

  Other towers

The term "tower" is also sometimes used to refer to firefighting equipment with an extremely tall ladder designed for use in firefighting/rescue operations involving high-rise buildings.

  See also

  The Historic Munttoren in Amsterdam
  The Sosruko tower in Nalchik, Russia
  Russian TV tower, Penza
  Watchtower in the Israeli West Bank barrier
  The Hyperboloid lattice shell of Shukhov Tower in Moscow, Russia.
  The Historic 17th Century Pelion Tower in Greece

  Notes

  Further reading

  • Fritz Leonhardt (1989), Towers : a historical survey, Butterworth Architecture, 343 pages.
   
               

 

Toutes les traductions de Tower


Contenu de sensagent

  • définitions
  • synonymes
  • antonymes
  • encyclopédie

dictionnaire et traducteur pour sites web

Alexandria

Une fenêtre (pop-into) d'information (contenu principal de Sensagent) est invoquée un double-clic sur n'importe quel mot de votre page web. LA fenêtre fournit des explications et des traductions contextuelles, c'est-à-dire sans obliger votre visiteur à quitter votre page web !

Essayer ici, télécharger le code;

SensagentBox

Avec la boîte de recherches Sensagent, les visiteurs de votre site peuvent également accéder à une information de référence pertinente parmi plus de 5 millions de pages web indexées sur Sensagent.com. Vous pouvez Choisir la taille qui convient le mieux à votre site et adapter la charte graphique.

Solution commerce électronique

Augmenter le contenu de votre site

Ajouter de nouveaux contenus Add à votre site depuis Sensagent par XML.

Parcourir les produits et les annonces

Obtenir des informations en XML pour filtrer le meilleur contenu.

Indexer des images et définir des méta-données

Fixer la signification de chaque méta-donnée (multilingue).


Renseignements suite à un email de description de votre projet.

Jeux de lettres

Les jeux de lettre français sont :
○   Anagrammes
○   jokers, mots-croisés
○   Lettris
○   Boggle.

Lettris

Lettris est un jeu de lettres gravitationnelles proche de Tetris. Chaque lettre qui apparaît descend ; il faut placer les lettres de telle manière que des mots se forment (gauche, droit, haut et bas) et que de la place soit libérée.

boggle

Il s'agit en 3 minutes de trouver le plus grand nombre de mots possibles de trois lettres et plus dans une grille de 16 lettres. Il est aussi possible de jouer avec la grille de 25 cases. Les lettres doivent être adjacentes et les mots les plus longs sont les meilleurs. Participer au concours et enregistrer votre nom dans la liste de meilleurs joueurs ! Jouer

Dictionnaire de la langue française
Principales Références

La plupart des définitions du français sont proposées par SenseGates et comportent un approfondissement avec Littré et plusieurs auteurs techniques spécialisés.
Le dictionnaire des synonymes est surtout dérivé du dictionnaire intégral (TID).
L'encyclopédie française bénéficie de la licence Wikipedia (GNU).

Copyright

Les jeux de lettres anagramme, mot-croisé, joker, Lettris et Boggle sont proposés par Memodata.
Le service web Alexandria est motorisé par Memodata pour faciliter les recherches sur Ebay.
La SensagentBox est offerte par sensAgent.

Traduction

Changer la langue cible pour obtenir des traductions.
Astuce: parcourir les champs sémantiques du dictionnaire analogique en plusieurs langues pour mieux apprendre avec sensagent.

 

6812 visiteurs en ligne

calculé en 0,046s


Je voudrais signaler :
section :
une faute d'orthographe ou de grammaire
un contenu abusif (raciste, pornographique, diffamatoire)
une violation de copyright
une erreur
un manque
autre
merci de préciser :