Either of two punctuation marks (`<' or `>') used in computer programming and sometimes used to enclose textual material.
An L-shaped metal bracket.
Sinônimos
Examples for "angle iron"
Examples for "angle iron"
1The rheostat boxes themselves are also insulated from the angle iron supporting them.
2He coughed violently, as though he had eaten a piece of angle iron.
3The bridge was strengthened by eighty-three miles of angle iron.
4To give the water a rotary motion he had inserted a helical piece of angle iron, and so prevented deposition.
5They weren't bars, as he'd thought at first, but lengths of two-by-two angle iron the same as those across the bathroom window.
1Each menu item has a precedence number within angle brackets.
2The Greek poems are set off by angle brackets.
3Any place where angle brackets are used, i.e.
4Here, we stripped off the left and right angle brackets from an XML tag one at a time.
5Single Greek words embedded in roman text have also been transliterated, as described above, and are identified by double angle brackets, e.g.
6They have been moved to the end of the appropriate sections of the E-Text, and footnote markers, identified by double angle brackets, i.e.
7Names of places and titles of books are often left untranslated, but when they carry a translatable meaning I have added this in angle brackets.
Translations for angle bracket