English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

First attested in the 1660s, probably from cant (slope, edge, corner) + lever, but the earliest form (c. 1610) was cantlapper. First element may also be Spanish can (dog), an architect's term for an end of timber jutting out of a wall, on which beams rested.

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

cantilever (plural cantilevers)

  1. (architecture) A beam anchored at one end and projecting into space, such as a long bracket projecting from a wall to support a balcony.
    • 1941 January, the late John Phillimore, “The Forth Bridge 1890-1940”, in Railway Magazine, page 5:
      Eventually Sir John Fowler's and Sir Benjamin Baker's continuous steel girder bridge on the cantilever principle was adopted.
    • 1951, Sinclair Lewis, World So Wide[1], Chapter:
      He loved Litchfield, Sharon, Williamsburg; he preferred the Georgian, and he had theories about developing a truly American style. He was called a plodder by all the Kivis, and in turn he disliked their bleak blocks of Modernist cement, their glass-fronted hen-houses, their architectural spiders with cantilever claws.
    • 1951 May, “British Railways Standard Coaches”, in Railway Magazine, page 327:
      The underframe, which has been designed to take buffing loads of 200 tons both on the centre coupler and on the retractable side buffers, consists of two centre girders from which cantilevers project to support the solebars, which in turn carry the bodyside structure.
    • 2004, Alan Hollinghurst, chapter 10, in The Line of Beauty [], 1st US edition, New York, N.Y.: Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN:
      The service stairs were next to the main stairs, separated only by a wall, but what a difference there was between them: the narrow back stairs, dangerously unrailed, under the bleak gleam of a skylight, each step worn down to a steep hollow, turned tightly in a deep grey shaft; whereas the great main sweep, a miracle of cantilevers, dividing and joining again, was hung with the portraits of prince-bishops, and had ears of corn in its wrought-iron banisters that trembled to the tread.
    • 2023 May 3, Philip Haigh, “The art and science of building bridges”, in RAIL, number 982, page 40:
      The plank along which pirates made their victims walk was a cantilever. So is a diving board. As you walk along the plank, the unsupported ends dips [sic]. It's possible to arrange for two cantilevers to be connected at their unsupported ends, which would let you seamlessly cross from one cantilever to the other while also distributing your weight across both fixed ends.
  2. A beam anchored at one end and used as a lever within a microelectromechanical system.
  3. (figure skating) A technique, similar to the spread eagle, in which the skater travels along a deep edge with knees bent and bends their back backwards, parallel to the ice.

Derived terms edit

Translations edit

Verb edit

cantilever (third-person singular simple present cantilevers, present participle cantilevering, simple past and past participle cantilevered)

  1. To project (something) in the manner of or by means of a cantilever.
    • 2007 October 28, Nicolai Ouroussoff, “Where Gods Yearn for Long-Lost Treasures”, in New York Times[2]:
      Just above, the museums top floor seems to shift slightly, its corners cantilevering over the edge of the story below as if it is sliding off the top of the building.

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Further reading edit

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French edit

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

cantilever m (plural cantilevers)

  1. cantilever