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camber

[ UK /kˈæmbɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈkæmbɝ/ ]
VERB
  1. curve upward in the middle
NOUN
  1. a slope in the turn of a road or track; the outside is higher than the inside in order to reduce the effects of centrifugal force
  2. a slight convexity (as of the surface of a road)
  3. the alignment of the wheels of a motor vehicle closer together at the bottom than at the top

How To Use camber In A Sentence

  • In Camberwick Green, everyone had sensibly diversified into specialist trades that made the town work as a well-regulated organic entity.
  • Compton kept her balance, bobbling only once in the extremely loose, off-camber right-hander that tripped up a number of riders. Katie Compton wins day 2 of the Cincinnati UCI3 Cyclocross Festival
  • Their roads were highways, raised up on a cambered bank of material dug from roadside ditches.
  • These are almost invariably twisty, wet, uneven, covered in spilt diesel, negatively cambered and crawling with fools.
  • The road surface had become uneven with potholes and poor camber.
  • Many parts of the road are narrow, and in some places the camber is very awkward.
  • People are not used to driving on windy country roads with adverse cambers and it takes them by surprise.
  • When you're faced with the problems of ovality, camber, or drift in drawn or cast tubing, we'll use counterboring to re-size a hole to a controlled dimension.
  • The steering requires constant concentration as it's very sensitive and prone to the slightest camber in the road.
  • A, the parthan kicks a twizzle off sides, and thus has to camber; B, the bup scores a rouge after hitting off an opposing behind; or C, 14 planets are tallied, but only the key wins the grander. Air Force Academy Superintendent Plays Not My Job
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