B2 verb #7,000 رایج‌ترین 4 دقیقه مطالعه

buttress

To buttress something means to support or strengthen it, like adding a prop to a wall or evidence to an argument.

Explanation at your level:

To buttress means to support something. Imagine a wall that is falling down. You put a big stick against it to keep it up. That is a buttress. We use this word when we make an idea or a plan stronger. If you have a good idea, you can buttress it with more facts. This helps other people believe you. It is like helping a friend stand up when they are tired. You are giving them support so they do not fall. We use this word in school or when we talk about big things like buildings or rules.

When you buttress something, you are making it stronger. Think of a bridge. If the bridge is weak, engineers add extra metal to buttress it. This stops the bridge from breaking. We also use this word for ideas. If you say, 'I think it will rain,' you can buttress that idea by saying, 'Look at those dark clouds!' The clouds are your proof. Using this word shows you are being careful and want to make sure your ideas are solid. It is a very useful word for writing essays or explaining why you think something is true.

In intermediate English, buttress is used to describe the act of reinforcing something that might otherwise fail. It is common in business and news. For example, a company might buttress its financial position by saving more money. Or, a lawyer might buttress their argument by bringing in a witness. It implies that the thing being supported is important and needs extra help to stay upright. You will often see it in phrases like 'buttress the case' or 'buttress the defense.' It is a formal word, so it is better for writing or professional meetings than for casual chat with friends.

At the B2 level, you can use buttress to talk about complex systems. It is not just about physical walls anymore; it is about abstract structures like legal systems, economic policies, or personal beliefs. When an argument is buttressed by evidence, it becomes much harder to challenge. This word adds a level of sophistication to your writing. It suggests that you are not just making a point, but that you have carefully considered the foundation of your argument. It is a great alternative to simpler words like 'support' or 'strengthen' when you want to sound more precise and academic.

Mastering buttress means understanding its nuance of 'defensive reinforcement.' It is frequently used in political and sociological contexts to describe how institutions protect themselves. For example, a government might buttress its authority by passing new laws. The word carries a slight connotation of being under pressure or facing a threat. If something needs to be buttressed, it implies there is a risk of collapse or erosion. In academic writing, using this word allows you to articulate the relationship between evidence and theory with great clarity. It is an essential tool for any student of history, political science, or law.

The word buttress is a perfect example of how language bridges the gap between the concrete and the conceptual. Its etymological roots in 'pushing' reveal the underlying energy of the word—it is an active, forceful kind of support. When you use it at a C2 level, you are acknowledging that stability is rarely static; it must be constantly maintained against external pressures. Whether you are analyzing the buttressing of an empire's borders or the psychological buttressing of a character's ego in a novel, the word provides a vivid image of resilience. It is a word that demands respect for the structure it describes, whether that structure is made of stone or of logic. Use it when you want to emphasize the deliberate, strategic effort required to prevent a collapse of any kind.

واژه در 30 ثانیه

  • Buttress means to support or reinforce.
  • It is used for both physical structures and abstract ideas.
  • It is a formal word, common in academic and professional settings.
  • It comes from an Old French word meaning 'to push'.

When you hear the word buttress, think of stability. Originally an architectural term, it describes a structure built against a wall to keep it from falling over. Imagine a grand, old cathedral; those stone arches on the outside are the literal buttresses keeping the roof from collapsing.

Today, we use this word quite often in a figurative sense. If you are writing an essay and you add more facts to make your point stronger, you are buttressing your argument. It is a fantastic word to use when you want to describe how something weak is being made strong by an outside force. Whether you are talking about a physical wall or a political system, the goal is always the same: to prevent collapse and ensure endurance.

The history of buttress is a fascinating journey through time. It traces back to the Middle English word boterace, which itself comes from the Old French bouter, meaning 'to push' or 'to thrust.' This is the same root that gives us the word 'butt' (as in to push with one's head).

Historically, the word was strictly about construction. Medieval architects needed a way to support high, heavy stone walls without making them too thick to have windows. The invention of the flying buttress allowed for those beautiful, light-filled spaces we see in Gothic architecture. Over the centuries, the word migrated from the construction site to the library and the courtroom. By the 17th century, people began using it to describe 'supporting' an idea or a claim, showing how language evolves from the physical world into the realm of abstract thought.

You will mostly encounter buttress in formal or semi-formal writing. It is a favorite of journalists, academics, and lawyers because it sounds precise and authoritative. You wouldn't usually say you are 'buttressing your sandwich,' but you might say you are 'buttressing your case' in a debate.

Common collocations include buttress an argument, buttress a claim, or buttress the economy. It often appears in contexts where there is a threat of failure or doubt. If an economy is shaky, the government might introduce new policies to buttress it. Because it carries a sense of weight and importance, it is best reserved for situations where something significant is at stake. Avoid using it for trivial matters, as it might sound overly dramatic.

While buttress itself isn't the core of many common idioms, it fits into the broader family of 'support' expressions. 1. Shore up: To support something that is failing. Example: 'They had to shore up the foundation.' 2. Bolster the ranks: To add more people to a group. Example: 'The team bolstered their ranks with new recruits.' 3. Back up: To provide evidence for a claim. Example: 'Can you back up your statement with facts?' 4. Hold the line: To maintain a position under pressure. Example: 'We must hold the line against these changes.' 5. Stand behind: To support someone or something. Example: 'I stand behind my decision.' These expressions share the same spirit as buttressing.

Buttress is a regular verb. Its past tense is buttressed, and its present participle is buttressing. It is almost always used as a transitive verb, meaning it needs an object—you must buttress something.

In terms of pronunciation, the IPA is /ˈbʌtrɪs/ in both British and American English. The stress is on the first syllable, which is a common pattern for two-syllable nouns and verbs in English. It rhymes with words like cutlass, rustless, and dustless. When you say it, make sure to emphasize the 'BUT' and let the 'tress' sound trail off lightly. It is a crisp, satisfying word to pronounce, especially when you are making a strong point in a conversation.

Fun Fact

The 'flying buttress' was a revolutionary invention that allowed Gothic cathedrals to have massive stained-glass windows.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ˈbʌtrɪs/

Short 'u' sound, clear 't's.

US /ˈbʌtrɪs/

Similar to UK, clear 'r'.

Common Errors

  • Mispronouncing the 'u' as 'oo'.
  • Dropping the 'r'.
  • Adding an extra syllable.

Rhymes With

cutlass rustless dustless gutless trustless

Difficulty Rating

خواندن 3/5

Moderate difficulty due to formal register.

Writing 4/5

Advanced vocabulary.

Speaking 3/5

Good for formal speech.

شنیدن 3/5

Clear pronunciation.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

support wall strong base

Learn Next

corroborate substantiate reinforce

پیشرفته

foundation structural integrity empirical evidence

Grammar to Know

Transitive Verbs

He buttressed the wall.

Passive Voice

The wall was buttressed.

Participle Adjectives

The buttressed wall.

Examples by Level

1

The wall needs a buttress.

The wall needs support.

Noun usage.

2

He will buttress the fence.

He will support the fence.

Verb usage.

3

We buttress the tent.

We support the tent.

Simple present.

4

Support can buttress us.

Support can help us.

Modal verb.

5

The wood buttress is big.

The wood support is big.

Descriptive.

6

They buttress the old house.

They support the house.

Subject-verb agreement.

7

Please buttress the shelf.

Please support the shelf.

Imperative.

8

I buttress my plant.

I support my plant.

Simple present.

1

She used facts to buttress her story.

2

The new law will buttress the economy.

3

They buttressed the bridge with steel.

4

He buttressed his claim with a photo.

5

The team buttressed their defense.

6

We need to buttress the roof.

7

Evidence buttressed his alibi.

8

The pillars buttress the ceiling.

1

The report is buttressed by new data.

2

They buttressed the wall to stop it falling.

3

Arguments must be buttressed by logic.

4

The policy was buttressed by public support.

5

He buttressed his argument with research.

6

The foundation was buttressed by concrete.

7

We must buttress our weak points.

8

The company buttressed its market share.

1

The author buttresses her theory with historical facts.

2

The government sought to buttress the currency.

3

His confidence was buttressed by his success.

4

They buttressed the structure against the storm.

5

The decision was buttressed by legal precedent.

6

She buttressed her case with expert testimony.

7

The alliance was buttressed by a trade deal.

8

The findings were buttressed by a second study.

1

The regime buttressed its power through censorship.

2

Architects buttressed the cathedral with flying arches.

3

His fragile ego was buttressed by constant praise.

4

The argument is well-buttressed by empirical evidence.

5

They buttressed the dam against rising water levels.

6

The treaty buttressed the fragile peace in the region.

7

She buttressed her reputation with years of hard work.

8

The theory is buttressed by decades of observation.

1

The philosophical framework is buttressed by ancient logic.

2

The entire societal structure was buttressed by tradition.

3

He buttressed his claims with a wealth of archival data.

4

The crumbling wall was buttressed by modern steel beams.

5

Her resolve was buttressed by her deep-seated beliefs.

6

The narrative is buttressed by subtle, recurring symbols.

7

Economic stability was buttressed by strict regulations.

8

The thesis is buttressed by a rigorous methodology.

مترادف‌ها

reinforce strengthen bolster fortify uphold corroborate

متضادها

undermine weaken subvert

ترکیب‌های رایج

buttress an argument
buttress a claim
buttress the economy
buttress a position
buttress the foundation
heavily buttressed
buttress the defense
buttress the peace
buttress the structure
buttress the ego

Idioms & Expressions

"shore up"

To support something that is failing.

They had to shore up the bridge.

neutral

"back up"

To provide evidence for a claim.

Can you back up your claim?

casual

"bolster the ranks"

To add more support or people.

We need to bolster the ranks.

neutral

"hold the line"

To maintain a position under pressure.

We must hold the line.

neutral

"stand behind"

To support someone or something.

I stand behind my team.

neutral

"give weight to"

To make an argument more convincing.

Your experience gives weight to your words.

formal

Easily Confused

buttress vs butcher

Similar sound.

Butcher is a person who cuts meat; buttress is a support.

The butcher cut the meat / The buttress held the wall.

buttress vs butt

Shared root.

Butt is a push or a body part; buttress is a support structure.

He gave it a butt / The buttress is strong.

buttress vs fortify

Similar meaning.

Fortify implies defense against attack; buttress implies support against collapse.

Fortify the castle / Buttress the wall.

buttress vs reinforce

Similar meaning.

Reinforce is more general; buttress is more specific to structural or foundational support.

Reinforce the team / Buttress the argument.

Sentence Patterns

A2

Subject + buttress + object

The facts buttress his claim.

B1

Subject + is + buttressed + by + noun

The theory is buttressed by data.

B2

To + buttress + object

To buttress the wall, they added stone.

B1

Subject + will + buttress + object

They will buttress the economy.

C1

Subject + has + buttressed + object

He has buttressed his argument well.

خانواده کلمه

Nouns

buttress A structure built for support.

Verbs

buttress To support.

Adjectives

buttressed Supported or reinforced.

مرتبط

abut Shares the root meaning of pushing against.

How to Use It

frequency

5

Formality Scale

Academic/Formal Professional Neutral Casual

اشتباهات رایج

Using 'buttress' for light things. Use 'support' or 'help'.
Buttress implies heavy, structural support.
Confusing with 'butcher'. Buttress is for support.
Different sounds and meanings.
Using as a noun when a verb is needed. The wall needs a buttress (noun) / We must buttress the wall (verb).
Know the part of speech.
Overusing in casual speech. Use 'help' or 'back up'.
It sounds too formal for casual chat.
Thinking it means 'to attack'. It means to support.
It is the opposite of attack.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace Trick

Imagine a giant 'B' (for Buttress) leaning against a wall to hold it up.

💡

When Native Speakers Use It

They use it when they want to sound like they have strong evidence.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Associated with grand European cathedrals.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Always follow it with an object.

💡

Say It Right

Keep the 'u' short like in 'but'.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't use it for small, unimportant things.

💡

Did You Know?

The word comes from the same root as 'butt' (to push).

💡

Study Smart

Use it in your next essay to impress your teacher.

💡

Writing Tip

Use it when you need a stronger word than 'support'.

💡

Synonym Swap

Replace 'support' with 'buttress' in formal contexts.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

BUT-TRESS: A TRESS (hair) needs a BUT (base) to stay up.

Visual Association

A stone arch holding up a cathedral wall.

Word Web

support strength foundation reinforcement stability

چالش

Find an argument you believe in and write one sentence to 'buttress' it with a fact.

ریشه کلمه

Old French / Middle English

Original meaning: To push or thrust

بافت فرهنگی

None.

Common in architecture and academic writing.

Notre Dame Cathedral (famous for flying buttresses) Academic papers on political science

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Academic Writing

  • buttress the argument
  • buttress the thesis
  • buttress the claim

Architecture

  • flying buttress
  • stone buttress
  • structural buttress

Economics/Politics

  • buttress the economy
  • buttress the policy
  • buttress the regime

Legal Debates

  • buttress the defense
  • buttress the case
  • buttress the testimony

Conversation Starters

"What is something you would like to buttress in your life?"

"Can you think of a building that uses buttresses?"

"Why is it important to buttress an argument with evidence?"

"Have you ever had to buttress a friend during a hard time?"

"What kind of evidence do you use to buttress your opinions?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a time you had to support (buttress) a friend.

Describe a building you have seen that needed support.

If you were writing a book, how would you buttress your main character's beliefs?

Why do we need to buttress our arguments in debates?

سوالات متداول

8 سوال

No, it is very commonly used for ideas and arguments.

It might sound a bit too formal for casual texting.

It can be both, but it is most often used as a verb.

A specific architectural support used in Gothic buildings.

Yes, its root means to push or thrust.

It is common in formal writing but rare in daily conversation.

BUH-triss.

You can buttress their confidence, but you don't usually buttress a person directly.

خودت رو بسنج

fill blank A1

The stone wall needs a ___ to stay up.

درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: buttress

A buttress provides support.

multiple choice A2

What does 'buttress' mean?

درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: To support

It means to provide support.

true false B1

Buttress is a synonym for destroy.

درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: نادرست

It is the opposite of destroy.

match pairs B1

Word

معنی

All matched!

Matching words with opposites.

sentence order B2

کلمات زیر رو بزن تا جمله رو بسازی
درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح:

The wall will buttress... wait, the buttress will support the wall.

fill blank C1

His theory was ___ by new evidence.

درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: buttressed

Evidence supports a theory.

multiple choice C2

Which context is 'buttress' most common in?

درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: Academic writing

It is a formal, academic word.

true false B2

You can buttress a physical building.

درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح: درست

It is used for both physical and abstract things.

match pairs C1

Word

معنی

All matched!

Synonym matching.

sentence order B1

کلمات زیر رو بزن تا جمله رو بسازی
درسته! نه دقیقاً. پاسخ صحیح:

He buttressed his argument.

امتیاز: /10

Related Content

واژه‌های بیشتر Actions

abcredance

C1

اعتبار یا اعتبار ادعا، فرایند یا سندی را بر اساس شواهد دقیق به طور رسمی اعطا کردن.

abnasccide

C1

چیزی که ذاتاً تمایل داره در یه مرحله‌ی خاصی از خودش جدا بشه یا کنده بشه.

absorb

B2

جذب کردن یعنی چیزی رو به خودش گرفتن، مثل اسفنج که آب رو جذب می‌کنه، یا فهمیدن اطلاعات.

abstain

C1

To voluntarily refrain from an action or practice, especially one that is considered unhealthy or morally questionable. It is also used formally to describe the act of choosing not to cast a vote in an election or deliberation.

abvictly

C1

حل قاطعانه و ناگهانی یک وضعیت یا اختلاف پیچیده با اعمال نیروی قاطع یا اقتدار بی‌نهایت.

abvitfy

C1

"abvitfy" توانایی سازگاری سریع با تغییرات تکنولوژیکی رو توصیف می‌کنه، یه جور انعطاف‌پذیریه.

accelerate

C1

To increase the speed or rate of something, or to make a process happen sooner than expected. In technical contexts, it refers to the rate of change of velocity, while in general contexts, it often describes the speeding up of progress or development.

accept

A1

یعنی چیزی رو که بهت تعارف کردن قبول کنی یا به یک دعوت جواب مثبت بدی. گاهی هم به معنی کنار اومدن با یک حقیقته.

achieve

A2

یعنی بعد از کلی تلاش، به یه هدفی برسی یا کاری رو تموم کنی. در واقع با سخت‌کوشی یه نتیجه مثبت بگیری.

acquiesce

C1

با اکراه و بدون اعتراض پذیرفتن چیزی. چون چاره دیگری نیست، موافقت می‌کنند.

مفید بود؟
هنوز نظری وجود ندارد. اولین نفری باشید که افکار خود را به اشتراک می‌گذارد!