0 past simple and past participle of straddle
1 to sit or stand with your legs on either side of something:
This is hardly surprising since many of the writers straddled artistic and reform circles.
The possession of composite estates, or properties that straddled borders, enabled many men to sit as grand jurors in more than one county jurisdiction.
However, more borders would be straddled in this case, affecting border detection and contrast estimation by mixing information from several objects.
The long tubular duct, which makes up about one twelfth of ducts, carries the highest risk of embolization since there is no area of constriction to be straddled.
Retired people during the 1990s straddled two dominant cohorts, a conservative generation born at the beginning of the 20th century, and a more culturally-liberal generation born during the 1940s.
The time period addressed in the theses has also altered; though compiling statistics here is difficult as many theses straddled periods, particularly the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Canopy heating was less on the raised beds, especially when straddled by rain shelters.
Disease straddled the divide, a threat to both, but perceived and dealt with differently by each.