cantilever

Etymology
First attested in the 1660s, probably from +, but the earliest form (c. 1610) was. First element may also be 🇨🇬, an architect's term for an end of timber jutting out of a wall, on which beams rested.

Noun

 * 1)  A beam anchored at one end and projecting into space, such as a long bracket projecting from a wall to support a balcony.
 * 2) A beam anchored at one end and used as a lever within a microelectromechanical system.
 * 3)  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.
 * 1) A beam anchored at one end and used as a lever within a microelectromechanical system.
 * 2)  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.
 * 1) A beam anchored at one end and used as a lever within a microelectromechanical system.
 * 2)  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.
 * 1)  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.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Catalan: coll fals, voladís, mènsula
 * Czech:, krakorec
 * Estonian: konsool
 * Finnish: ulokepalkki
 * French:
 * German:, Kragträger, ,
 * Hungarian:, konzolos/kiugró tartó/támasz, konzoltartó, egyoldalt befogott tartó, tartókar
 * Italian:
 * Korean: 캔틸레버
 * Norwegian: utkraging, utkravning,, utstikker
 * Portuguese: em balanço
 * Russian: консо́льная ба́лка,, ,
 * Spanish:

Verb

 * 1) To project (something) in the manner of or by means of a cantilever.