Online Encyclopedia

JOIST

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 494 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOIST  , in

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building, one of a row or tier of beams set edgewise from one wall or
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partition to another and carrying the flooring boards on the upper edge and the laths of the ceiling on the
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lower . In double flooring there are three series of joists, binding, bridging, and ceiling joists . The binding joists are the real support of the floor,
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running from wall to wall, and carrying the bridging joists above and the ceiling joists below (see
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CARPENTRY), The
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Mid . Eng. form of the word was giste or gyste, and was adapted from O . Fr. giste,
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modern gite, a beam supporting the platform of a
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gun . By origin the word meant that on which anything lies or rests (gesir, to lie;
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Lat. jacere) . The
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English word " gist," in such phrases as " the gist of the
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matter," the main or central point in an
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argument, is a doublet of joist . According to Skeat, the origin of this meaning is an O . Fr. proverbial expression, Je say bien oiu gist le lievre, I know well where the hare lies, i.e . I know the real point of the matter .

End of Article: JOIST
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SIRE DE JEAN JOINVILLE (1224-1319)
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MAURUS JOKAI (1825-1904)

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