Stilt in a sentence as a noun

The article says that the stilt raised as they found each other abruptly, losing the guide as well.

What's preventing people from moving onto stilt houses or even large floating seasteads?

You have all that pressure on one skinny little stilt-foot, on mud which might be soft, walking through grass which might be long.

As for Southeast Asians: they're already used to living on water, with stilt houses, rice terraces etc.

It seems that asking people which they prefer is the only way to do this, even if it does stilt towards the market leader.

Kind of similar to those running stilt things that are basically bent carbon fiber sheets working like a bow.

Then to clarify that further by stating "american football", does kinda add to the stiltedness.

Yeah, a better example would have been stilt houses, which are already scattered around the Florida coast due to the flooding from hurricanes

Traditionally it was dealt with stilt houses and so on. Today you would just deal with it by having houses elevated about 6m and your first floor being able to withstand flooding for the worse possible typhoons, which means a stone floor and a concrete house.

Could it also be possible that the stilt-wearing ant was too far off the ground to smell its colony, or maybe it deemed itself defective and quarantined itself?

Also, you have to look at the whole system in terms of how much surface space it needs - in any reasonably dense city you soon start to need to go either underground or stilted.

I've seen a lot of stilts being built along the Yangtze River, but that is hardly flat at all, they have to stilt or go low enough to build a really long tunnel, which isn't viable; it definitely wasn't because they were cutting through a farmer's field!

Does the motor add force, or absorb force to regenerative-braking-->energy?A fly-wheel-compression system on a brushless alternator would be an interesting addition to a spring-ish based stilt-prosthetic.

Your example of past subsidies provides an excellent argument for this: given the political clout these entities hold and have in the past used to stilt legislation in their favor, what leads us to believe we're going to do any better with new regulations?At the end of the day, the market is demanding better internet service.

Stilt definitions

noun

a column of wood or steel or concrete that is driven into the ground to provide support for a structure

See also: pile spile piling

noun

one of two stout poles with foot rests in the middle; used for walking high above the ground; "he was so tall I thought he was on stilts"

noun

long-legged three-toed wading bird of brackish marshes of Australia

noun

long-legged three-toed black-and-white wading bird of inland ponds and marshes or brackish lagoons

See also: stiltbird longlegs long-legs