Buttress in a sentence as a noun

Then we'll build structures to buttress them back in.

Exactly how much research have you done to buttress that "should"?

Redefining all these terms is a silly way to buttress your POV.

Call in a **** leader to buttress the argument\n3.

Typically ads like this are intended to buttress the companies stock price.

Oh, man, you need to be careful about bringing up the specter of "climate-change denial" like it's going to buttress your point.

A list of meaningless names to buttress the case for hurting other people is remarkably unpersuasive.

Buttress in a sentence as a verb

The corn syrup with additives is an attempt to buttress any dietary deficiencies.

Day to day transactional use will be a consistently lagging indicator that helps buttress the rising exchange rate floor.

I think you mean "this is a flawed article because it starts out to buttress a preconception rather than examine the data and then find a conclusion.

You get this in traditional Western philosophy, even as people define new terminology, that adorn axioms and logical rules to buttress its meaning.

You're of course correct that including Katrina would buttress the female hurricane deadliness theory but would also open up the study to charges that it was influenced by a single outlier.

Given the inherently interconnected and international character of the Internet, as well as the fact that many of its key network peering and exchange points are in countries fairly high on the "Eyes" hierarchy, I would be deeply sceptical of the viability of any effort to become "the Switzerland of data".So, you build a data centre in a "Switzerland of data" and throw something like national government-level resources into its physical security, and buttress it with legislation highly supportive of nondisclosure and customer privacy.

Buttress definitions

noun

a support usually of stone or brick; supports the wall of a building

See also: buttressing

verb

reinforce with a buttress; "Buttress the church"

verb

make stronger or defensible; "buttress your thesis"