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tripod
[trahy-pod]
noun
a stool, table, pedestal, etc., with three legs.
a three-legged stand or support, as for a camera or telescope.
the oracular seat of the priestess of Apollo at Delphi.
tripod
/ ˈtraɪpɒd, ˈtrɪpədəl /
noun
an adjustable and usually collapsible three-legged stand to which a camera, etc, can be attached to hold it steady
a stand or table having three legs
Other Word Forms
- tripodal adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of tripod1
Example Sentences
He would travel in his jeep with an assistant, armed with a pistol and a Vinten film camera, a tripod, and many rolls of film.
With her Art Deco fireplace as a backdrop and an iPhone perched on a tripod, she stunned the internet with her outlandish silhouettes, statuesque poses and high-fashion innovation.
Waiting with the sea of tripods outside the building most mornings of the trial was a queue of camp chairs.
You can still taste its acrid smell; all the TV equipment - cameras, lights, tripods - are tangles of twisted metal.
Local journalists were already carrying out interviews at the scene, before reporters from around the world turned the grassy mound opposite the stump into a "sea of camera tripods".
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