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Superstructure   /sˈupərstrˌəktʃər/   Listen
noun
Superstructure  n.  
1.
Any material structure or edifice built on something else; that which is raised on a foundation or basis; esp. (Arch.), All that part of a building above the basement. Also used figuratively. "You have added to your natural endowments the superstructure of study."
2.
(Railway Engin.) The sleepers, and fastenings, in distinction from the roadbed.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Superstructure" Quotes from Famous Books



... Foolish questions," where the Originall, periistaso, (set them by) is equivalent to the former word Reject. There is no other place that can so much as colourably be drawn, to countenance the Casting out of the Church faithfull men, such as beleeved the foundation, onely for a singular superstructure of their own, proceeding perhaps from a good & pious conscience. But on the contrary, all such places as command avoiding such disputes, are written for a Lesson to Pastors, (such as Timothy and Titus were) not to make new Articles ...
— Leviathan • Thomas Hobbes

... known to European experience, and a solitary good one, namely, eight hundred thousand pounds sterling. The man's name was Schreiber. Schreiber was an aggregate resulting from the conflux of all conceivable bad qualities. That was the elementary base of Schreiber; and the superstructure, or Corinthian decoration of his frontispiece, was, that Schreiber cultivated one sole science, namely, the science of taking snuff. Here were two separate objects for contemplation: one, bright as Aurora—that radiant Koh-i-noor, or mountain of light—the eight hundred thousand pounds; the other, ...
— Memorials and Other Papers • Thomas de Quincey

... since deserted their rough nest of sticks in the top of some tall tree, and now the squirrels come, investigate, and adopt the forsaken bird's-nest as the foundation of their home. The sticks are pressed more tightly together, all interstices filled up, and then a superstructure of leafy twigs is woven overhead and all around. The leaves on these twigs, killed before their time, do not fall; and when the branches of the tree become bare, there remains in one of the uppermost crotches a big ball of leaves,—rain and snow proof, with ...
— The Log of the Sun - A Chronicle of Nature's Year • William Beebe

... inner consciousness; but when he leaves the Senate in 1850 I have nothing whatever to go by; and, being by nature both a timid, and, on occasions, by choice a truthful, man, I would prefer to have some foundation of fact, no matter how slender, on which to build the airy and arabesque superstructure of my fancy—especially as I am writing a history. Now I hesitate to give him a wholly fictitious date of death and to invent all of the work of his later years. Would it be too infernal a nuisance for you to hire some of your ...
— Roosevelt in the Bad Lands • Hermann Hagedorn

... and superstructure are supported on two vessels connected, as shown in Figs. 4 and 5, with cross girders, a sufficient width being left between each vessel to form a well large enough for a barge to float into, and ...
— Scientific American Supplement, No. 795, March 28, 1891 • Various


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