What's the difference between girder and girt?

Girder


Definition:

  • (n.) One who girds; a satirist.
  • (n.) One who, or that which, girds.
  • (n.) A main beam; a stright, horizontal beam to span an opening or carry weight, such as ends of floor beams, etc.; hence, a framed or built-up member discharging the same office, technically called a compound girder. See Illusts. of Frame, and Doubleframed floor, under Double.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The refinery was working largely as usual, with steam pouring from vents on the complex of pipes, chimneys and girders which towers over the flatlands of the Humber estuary's south shore.
  • (2) Just offshore, steel girders poke out of the water to frustrate North Korean boats in the event of an invasion.
  • (3) Many are pinned down by huge blocks of concrete, bent iron girders, machinery.
  • (4) It was his first day at work but at 9.30am, barely two hours after he had begun manually counting the potato bags inside the steel girder compound, a Saudi-led airstrike began.
  • (5) Contractors are fitting gleaming walls of glass to girders which lurch at fashionably acute angles.
  • (6) "The podium for the politburo was there," he said, gesturing at an empty space surrounded by steel girders and a damp concrete floor.
  • (7) The structure is currently held up by iron girders put in place in 1947 by the British governor who ruled Palestine in the Mandate era .
  • (8) Several painted iron girders, stored on a field close to the farm, were determined as the source of the poisoning.
  • (9) The vehicle is believed to have been laden with 20 tonnes of steel girders.
  • (10) You can get waves off the ruins of the old west pier , where the steel girders stick out.
  • (11) When he brought the match to a conclusion after nearly three hours with a trademark lob (in a venue where the girders above the court are three centimetres lower than regulations stipulate), he fell to the clay – not his favourite playing surface – and cried uncontrollably.
  • (12) Close by, labourers scale the girders of what will be a massive commercial centre.
  • (13) It is believed to have been laden with 20 tonnes of steel girders.
  • (14) Among the features of the final stretch of the High Line – known as the Rail Yards section – is the 11th Avenue Bridge, an elevated ‘catwalk’ from which visitors can view the park, the cityscape and the Hudson River and the Pershing Square Beams; and a children’s play area constructed from the original line’s framework of steel beams and girders.
  • (15) There was no pavement, so as the traffic thundered past, we walked in the lane with the motorbikes and bicycles, many carrying steel girders that threatened to scythe us in two.
  • (16) Watson trudges past the heavy bags hanging from the steel girders.
  • (17) The students had ripped it down and the metal girders were twisted.
  • (18) Raising the roof, incidentally, is what the International Tennis Federation might have considered before a ball was struck as the girders holding the unbearably bright TV lights were a few centimetres the wrong side of legal height and a couple of Murray lobs almost bounced off them.
  • (19) Photograph: Sean Smith The entire roof of the palace has gone, leaving only a skeleton of red steel girders punctuated by tall trees.
  • (20) With its wood tables and industrial-scale girders and working roaster it's bang on trend.

Girt


Definition:

  • (imp. & p. p.) of Gird
  • () imp. & p. p. of Gird.
  • (v.) To gird; to encircle; to invest by means of a girdle; to measure the girth of; as, to girt a tree.
  • (a.) Bound by a cable; -- used of a vessel so moored by two anchors that she swings against one of the cables by force of the current or tide.
  • (n.) Same as Girth.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) At least it trumps its predecessor thanks to the inclusion of the word ‘girt’, which undercuts all the guff about “golden soil” and being “young and free” by virtue of sounding like an Irishman saying ‘girth’.
  • (2) Some favourite nature words: aftermath the first growth of grass in a field after it has been cut (English, regional) coire high, scooped hollow on a mountainside, usually cliff-girt (Gaelic) didder of a patch of bog or marsh; to quiver as a walker approaches it (East Anglia) eawl-leet dusk, lit.