Collocations withsuspension

These are words often used in combination withsuspension.

Click on a collocation to see more examples of it.

active suspension
The emergent passive physical structures are more energy efficient than a fully active suspension system.
From theCambridge English Corpus
automatic suspension
This automatic suspension also applies to normal calls to a concurrent predicate, even on backtracking.
From theCambridge English Corpus
front suspension
A model of the front suspension wishbone is presented as an example.
From theCambridge English Corpus
full suspension
The sentencing power given by the clause differs from full suspension in several important ways.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
immediate suspension
That applies particularly in the case of immediate suspension.
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
rear suspension
We're retaining the leaf spring design for the rear suspension at least through the next model year.
From theCambridge English Corpus
suspension component
For the suspension component called a roll bar or anti-roll bar, see sway bar.
From
Wikipedia
This example is from Wikipedia and may be reused under a CC BY-SA license.
suspension design
This approach adds pressure to discover physically meaningful structures for a semiactive suspension design.
From theCambridge English Corpus
suspension of disbelief
By 1932 the tale had been told too many times to hold claim to an audience's suspension of disbelief.
From theCambridge English Corpus
temporary suspension
Does the telegram use the words "temporary suspension"?
From the
Hansard archive
Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under theOpen Parliament Licence v3.0
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.