tracery|traceries in English

noun

['trac·er·y || 'treɪs(ə)rɪ]

ornament, embellishment

Use "tracery|traceries" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "tracery|traceries" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "tracery|traceries", or refer to the context using the word "tracery|traceries" in the English Dictionary.

1. One of the earliest examples is in the plate tracery at Winchester (1222–1235).

2. Victorian Gothic at its most tracery-like, pinnacles and lancets, deep in a dell.

3. The sun, like a pearl through the mist, turned the cobwebs into jewelled tracery.

4. Buildings of stone are adorned with whitewashed tracery along the windows, latticed arches, and multicolored glass mosaics.

5. The Clunch tracery and the mullion and architrave are of limestone, which may indicate they are part of an earlier restoration

6. The limestone fireplace is flanked by seating alcoves with half-vaulted canopies, each divided by a slender column that supports delicate open tracery.

7. ‘Highlights of these volumes are the windows of the choir Clerestory, and the tracery lights of various chapels and of the chapter house.’

8. Late 15th-century Cupboards for food storage, such as the English livery cupboard, had ventilating holes, often taking the form of carved open tracery

9. French Elaborately carved with linen fold panels, flamboyant designs, and pierced tracery, this Canopied seat may have served as a choir stall or church bench.

10. The Pointed arches rest upon pillars, possibly Norman, and above them, below the Decorated Clerestory windows, is a series of semicircular arches with flamboyant tracery, a remarkable feature

11. ‘The central Baldachin in Gossaert's Malvagna triptych contains a number of individual tracery figures that are essential to its design.’ ‘Also among the rich assortment of intriguing pieces that fill each page are panels dating from c.1600, decorated with saints standing beneath baldacchinos.’

12. ‘The central Baldachin in Gossaert's Malvagna triptych contains a number of individual tracery figures that are essential to its design.’ ‘Also among the rich assortment of intriguing pieces that fill each page are panels dating from c.1600, decorated with saints standing beneath baldacchinos.’

13. With questions, with the delectable contrasts between the flattened demotic of “blankety blank” and the rare slang of “gungy,” with the sonnet structure, with traceries of myth and with the tone of romantic eco-despair in the last four Assonantly-singing lines: “We dreamt they loved us; all was clover./But we woke to a cough, and the