Tie-off rail
[tahy-awf, -of] /ˈtaɪˌɔf, -ˌɒf/
noun
1.
trim rail.
Read Also:
- Tie-plate
noun, Railroads. 1. a plate set between the base of a rail and a crosstie to distribute the rail load over a greater area of the tie and thus reduce wear and damage to it.
- Tie-plug
noun, Railroads. 1. a wooden plug driven into the hole left in a tie when a spike has been withdrawn.
- Tiepolo
noun 1. Giovanni Battista [joh-vah-nee buh-tee-stuh;; Italian jaw-vahn-nee baht-tee-stah] /dʒoʊˈvɑ ni bəˈti stə;; Italian dʒɔˈvɑn ni bɑtˈti stɑ/ (Show IPA), 1696–1770, and his son, Giovanni Domenico [duh-men-i-koh;; Italian daw-me-nee-kaw] /dəˈmɛn ɪˌkoʊ;; Italian dɔˈmɛ ni kɔ/ (Show IPA) 1727–1804, Italian painters. noun 1. Giovanni Battista (dʒoˈvanni batˈtista). 1696–1770, Italian rococo painter, esp of frescoes as in […]
- Tier
noun 1. one of a series of rows or ranks rising one behind or above another, as of seats in an amphitheater, boxes in a theater, guns in a man-of-war, or oars in an ancient galley. 2. one of a number of galleries, as in a theater. 3. a layer; level; stratum: The wedding cake […]
- Tierced
adjective, Heraldry. 1. (of an escutcheon) divided vertically or horizontally into three equal parts.