overhang

[v. oh-ver-hang; n. oh-ver-hang] /v. ˌoʊ vərˈhæŋ; n. ˈoʊ vərˌhæŋ/
verb (used with object), overhung, overhanging.
1.
to hang or be suspended over:
A great chandelier overhung the ballroom.
2.
to extend, project, or jut over:
A wide balcony overhangs the garden.
3.
to impend over or threaten, as danger or evil; loom over:
The threat of war overhung Europe.
4.
to spread throughout; permeate; pervade:
the melancholy that overhung the proceedings.
5.
Informal. to hover over, as a threat or menace:
Unemployment continues to overhang the economic recovery.
verb (used without object), overhung, overhanging.
6.
to hang over; project or jut out over something below:
How far does the balcony overhang?
noun
7.
something that extends or juts out over; projection.
8.
the extent of projection, as of the bow of a ship.
9.
Informal. an excess or surplus:
an overhang of office space in midtown.
10.
a threat or menace:
to face the overhang of foreign reprisals.
11.
Architecture. a projecting upper part of a building, as a roof or balcony.
Origin
1590-1600; over- + hang
Examples from the web for overhanging
  • The steep thatch roof overhanging the house walls protects the interior from rain.
  • Cantilever construction allows for overhanging structures without external bracing.
  • overhanging wooden hoardings could be constructed if a castle was under threat.
British Dictionary definitions for overhanging

overhang

verb (ˌəʊvəˈhæŋ) -hangs, -hanging, -hung
1.
to project or extend beyond (a surface, building, etc)
2.
(transitive) to hang or be suspended over
3.
(transitive) to menace, threaten, or dominate
noun (ˈəʊvəˌhæŋ)
4.
a formation, object, part of a structure, etc, that extends beyond or hangs over something, such as an outcrop of rock overhanging a mountain face
5.
the amount or extent of projection
6.
(aeronautics)
  1. half the difference in span of the main supporting surfaces of a biplane or other multiplane
  2. the distance from the outer supporting strut of a wing to the wing tip
7.
(finance) the shares, collectively, that the underwriters have to buy when a new issue has not been fully taken up by the market
Word Origin and History for overhanging

overhang

v.

1590s, from over- + hang (v.). Related: Overhung; overhanging.

n.

"fact of overhanging," 1864, from overhang (v.).