buttress
A prominent projection of rock from the face of a mountain or cliff — a rib, a pillar, a flying wall of stone standing proud of the main face. Buttresses are some of the most sought-after climbing objectives: they catch light, shed water, and offer continuous lines of ascent that feel like climbing the mountain's spine. The word comes from architecture, but the mountain's buttresses came first.
Etymology
Old French bouterez, from bouter, to thrust. A thrusting out — the rock thrusts forward from the face.
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