a aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az

Перевод: ashlar speek ashlar


[существительное]
штучный камень; кладка из тесаного камня; тесаный камень


Тезаурус:

  1. All Saints is built of ashlar and rubble and consists of the chancel, nave with north and south porches, and west tower.
  2. Sunnyvale, California-based Ashlar Inc has opened up as Vellum Software Ltd, Cambridge, to sell its 3D CAD applications in the UK.
  3. It is cruciform and aisleless, built of locally quarried ashlar stone.
  4. Built of stone rubble faced with ashlar (stone dressed to a smooth finish) and Roman tiles, the original polygonal tower may have been 80 feet high, but it had fallen into ruin by medieval times and was partly rebuilt, probably in the reign of Henry V. It still stands to a height of 40 feet, however, and we can see the original windows which were tiny on the outside walls to prevent draughts interfering with the flames of the beacon at the top.
  5. In 1801 he wrapped the plain and pleasing ashlar face around what little he decided to retain of the earlier house.
  6. The present church of St Laurence dates from the late 12th century although the tower is probably of 15th century addition, being built from ashlar and cobble and various types of old bricks.
  7. The developers were also persuaded not to clean the finely-tooled ashlar stonework.
  8. This west front was thus transformed in the 1740s, with its handsome ashlar face and its dormer windows tucked behind the wide panelled parapet.
  9. Some two hundred years ago Thomas Cockram refaced the entrance front of Newton Farm in Purbeck ashlar.
  10. Its pillars were just rectangular blocks of mousy-grey ashlar; its capitals plain but for a fringe of simple water-leaf scallops.
  11. Much of his study of the often shameful encounter between the conquerors and the native Indians was hazy to me now, but the clean lines of the narrative still reverberated within me whenever I saw an Inca ashlar.
  12. It had been built in the late eighteenth century, two storeys high, shallow slate roof, red brick, seven windows set in ashlar along the upper floor, six below and the front door set centrally under a portico and pillared porch.
  13. The illustration of Clifton Hill with its icy reserve and its windows cut directly into the ashlar without surrounds is easily the most stylistically advanced in The Complete Body of Architecture that Ware published in 1756 to celebrate his life's work.

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