- Hanging garden
- Hanging Hang"ing, a.
1. Requiring, deserving, or foreboding death by the halter.
``What a hanging face!'' --Dryden.
[1913 Webster]
2. Suspended from above; pendent; as, hanging shelves. [1913 Webster]
3. Adapted for sustaining a hanging object; as, the hanging post of a gate, the post which holds the hinges. [1913 Webster]
{Hanging compass}, a compass suspended so that the card may be read from beneath.
{Hanging garden}, a garden sustained at an artificial elevation by any means, as by the terraces at Babylon.
{Hanging indentation}. See under {Indentation}.
{Hanging rail} (Arch.), that rail of a door or casement to which hinges are attached.
{Hanging side} (Mining), the overhanging side of an inclined or hading vein.
{Hanging sleeves}. (a) Strips of the same stuff as the gown, hanging down the back from the shoulders. (b) Loose, flowing sleeves.
{Hanging stile}. (Arch.) (a) That stile of a door to which hinges are secured. (b) That upright of a window frame to which casements are hinged, or in which the pulleys for sash windows are fastened.
{Hanging wall} (Mining), the upper wall of inclined vein, or that which hangs over the miner's head when working in the vein. [1913 Webster]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English. 2000.