Home1797 Edition

BRACE

Volume 3 · 205 words · 1797 Edition

Braffe, is also a foreign measure, answering to our fathom. See Fathom.

architecture, a piece of timber framed in with bevil joints, the use of which is to keep the building from swerving either way. When the brace is framed into the king-rafters or principal rafters, it is by some called a strut.

writing or printing, a crooked line inclosing a passage, as in a triplet.

Braces, in the sea-language, are ropes belonging to all the yards of a ship, except the mizen, two to each yard, reved through blocks that are fastened to pennants, feized to the yard-arms. Their use is either to square or traverse the yards. Hence to brace the yard, is to bring it to either side. All braces come aftward on; as, the main brace comes to the poop, the main-top-fall brace comes to the mizen-top and thence to the main shrouds, the fore and fore-top-fall braces come down by the main and main-top-fall stays, and so of the rest. But the mizen-bowline serves to brace to the yard, and the crofs-jack braces are brought forwards to the main shrouds, when the ship fails close by a wind.

Braces of a Coach, thick straps of leather on which it hangs.