1

bridge

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A valence bond, atom or chain of atoms that connects two different parts of a molecule; the atoms so connected being bridgeheads.
2

bridge

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A particular form of one hand placed on the table to support the cue when making a shot in cue sports.
3

bridge

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Cue for extended or tedious shots. Also called a spider.
4

bridge

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A device which connects two or more computer buses, typically in a transparent manner.

This chip is the bridge between the front-side bus and the I/O bus.

5

bridge

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A prosthesis replacing one or several adjacent teeth.

The dentist pulled out the decayed tooth and put in a bridge.

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bridge

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A song contained within another song, often demarcated by meter, key, or melody.

The lyrics in the song's bridge inverted its meaning.

7

bridge

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A statement, such as an offer, that signals a possibility of accord.
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bridge

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A system which connects two or more local area networks at layer 2.

The LAN bridge uses a spanning tree algorithm.

9

bridge

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An edge which, if removed, changes a connected graph to one that is not connected.
10

bridge

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An elevated platform above the upper deck of a mechanically propelled ship from which it is navigated and from which all activities on deck can be seen and controlled by the captain, etc; smaller ships have a wheelhouse, and sailing ships were controlled from a quarterdeck.

The first officer is on the bridge.

11

bridge

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An unintended solder connection between two or more components or pins.
12

bridge

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Any of several electrical devices that measure characteristics such as impedance and inductance by balancing different parts of a circuit.
13

bridge

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The piece, on string instruments, that supports the strings from the sounding board.
14

bridge

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The upper bony ridge of the human nose.

Rugby players often break the bridge of their noses.

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    "bridge." Phrases.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 28 Mar. 2024. <https://www.phrases.com/idioms/bridge>.

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