shear stress
noun
- See shear
shear
(shîr)
[Middle English scheren, from Old English sceran, N., from Middle English shere, from Old English scēar.]
verb: sheared, sheared or shorn (shôrn, shōrn), shear·ing, shears.
transitive verb
- To remove (fleece or hair) by cutting or clipping.
- To remove the hair or fleece from.
- To cut with or as if with shears: shearing a hedge.
- To divest or deprive as if by cutting: The prisoners were shorn of their dignity.
intransitive verb
- To use a cutting tool such as shears.
- To move or proceed by or as if by cutting: shear through the wheat.
- Physics To become deformed by forces tending to produce a shearing strain.
noun
- A pair of scissors. Often used in the plural.
- Any of various implements or machines that cut with a scissorlike action. Often used in the plural.
- The act, process, or result of shearing.
- Something cut off by shearing.
- The act, process, or fact of shearing. Used to indicate a sheep's age: a two-shear ram.
- An apparatus used to lift heavy weights, consisting of two or more spars joined at the top and spread at the base, the tackle being suspended from the top.
- Physics
- An applied force or system of forces that tends to produce a shearing strain. Also called shearing stress, shear stress
- A shearing strain.
derivatives
- sheaŕer
- noun