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Anchorage

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Anchorage

the largest city in Alaska, a port in the south, at the head of Cook Inlet. Pop.: 270 951 (2003 est.)
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

Anchorage

A device used for permanently securing the ends of a post-tensioned member, or for temporarily securing the ends of a pretensioned member during hardening of the concrete.
Illustrated Dictionary of Architecture Copyright © 2012, 2002, 1998 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved

anchorage

[′aŋ·kə·rij]
(architecture)
A permanent placement or foundation to which the lower members of a structure can be attached in order to provide stability for the entire structure.
(civil engineering)
An area where a vessel anchors or may anchor because of either suitability or designation. Also known as anchor station.
A device which anchors tendons to the posttensioned concrete member.
In pretensioning, a device used to anchor tendons temporarily during the hardening of the concrete.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

anchor, anchorage

medieval anchors, 10
anchor, 9
anchors, 1
1. A device such as a metal rod, wire, or strap, for fixing one object to another, as specially formed metal connectors used to fasten together timbers, masonry, trusses, etc.
2. In prestressed concrete, a device to lock the stressed tendon in position so that it will retain its stressed condition.
3. In precast concrete construction, a device used to attach the precast units to the building frame.
4. In slabs on grade, or walls, a device used to fasten to rock or adjacent structures to prevent movement of the slab or wall with respect to the foundation, adjacent structure, or rock.
5. A support which holds one end of a timber fast.
6. A device used to secure a window or doorframe to the building structure; usually adjustable in three dimensions; also see doorframe anchor.
8. The anchor-shaped dart in the egg-and-dart molding; also called anchor dart.
9. A device used in a piping system to secure the piping to a structure; typically provided by a metal insert in an overhead concrete slab or beam.
10. A wrought-iron clamp, of Flemish origin, on the exterior side of a brick building wall that is connected to the opposite wall by a steel tie-rod to prevent the two walls from spreading apart; these clamps were often in the shape of

anchorage

1. In posttensioning, a device which anchors the tendons to the posttensioned concrete member.
2. In pretensioning, a device used to anchor the tendons temporarily during the hardening of the concrete.
3. Same as anchor, 3.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Architecture and Construction. Copyright © 2003 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
These transfer rights include "on-line-transfers between a carrier's own aircraft; "inter-line" transfers between one carrier and another carrier; "co-mingling" of US and non-US cargo; and "change-of-gauge" transfers from, for example, a wide-bodied freighter aircraft to one or more smaller aircraft flying to potentially multiple destinations from Anchorage.
Therefore, the use of endosseous implants for anchorage purposes are increasingly used to achieve positional stability and maximum anchorage.2 The standard ISO 16443 (Dentistry " Vocabulary of Oral Implantology) specifies terms and definitions for dental implants, instruments and accessories, and the most commonly used clinical terms in the field of dental implantology.
Of course, no one assumes that all 300,000 Anchorage residents will turn out in the first year, so Perseverance's first Anchorage season will be modest, with two plays running for two weekends each.
He said that the savings for ships in anchorage are significant.
All routes will be operated by A320s except the Anchorage service, which will be flown on a 757-300.
Anchorages for lifelines must be independent of any anchorages used for suspended platforms, scaffolding, etc.
Over 80 percent of all commodities purchased by Alaskans flow through the seaport of Anchorage, spurring a competition for limited staging areas.
On a clear day the peak of "The High One" is visible even from downtown Anchorage some 130 miles away.
Whatever the reason, he notes, measurements from weather instruments lofted into the cloud as it passed over Anchorage suggest that ash particles 22 [micro]m in diameter had a Stokes number of 1.
People from all over the world are heading to Anchorage, Alaska, for the 2001 Special Olympics World Winter Games.
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