Use "colonnades" in a sentence

1. Marketplace with elegant colonnades and stalls

2. What does Colonnaded mean? Having one or more colonnades

3. Their central courts, colonnades, arcades and cupolas followed the Byzantine model.

4. Here, time has stood still. But beyond the latticed colonnades and well-tended lawns is a country in turmoil.

5. Would you like to take a tour through what remains of the temples, colonnades, statues, monuments, and public buildings of the agora in Athens?

6. Basilica In classical architecture, a large rectangular Roman hall with colonnades and a semi-circular apse, used primarily as a court of law

7. Basilica In classical architecture, a large rectangular Roman hall with colonnades and a semi-circular apse, used primarily as a court of law

8. The design, dominated by two loggias with trabeated Colonnades of coupled giant columns, was created by a committee of three, the Petit Conseil, consisting of Louis Le Vau

9. Ambulacrum is an architectural word that denotes an atrium, courtyard, or parvise in front of a basilica or church that is surrounded by arcades or colonnades, or trees, and which often contains a fountain.It also can denote a walking path that trees delineate

10. ‘The ‘long-tail effect’, currently making waves from broadcasting to bookselling, is one of those suddenly ubiquitous notions Brashly promising a revolution in consumer capitalism.’ ‘It was a few years later that the decorated building made a last brave stand, Art Deco's Egyptian colonnades and Moderne sunbursts sparkling Brashly

11. In Greek antiquity the city was called Pyrgos Stratonos (Straton's Tower), after a Greek adventurer or a Sidonian King; under this name it antedates, perhaps, Alexander the Great.King Herod named it Caesarea in honour of Augustus, and built there temples, palaces, a theatre, an amphitheatre, a port, and numerous monuments, with colonnades and

12. 5-4 5.4.1 Areaways 5-6 5.4.2 Vaults 5-6 5.4.2.1 Uses 5-6 5.4.2.2 Placement and Covers 5-8 5.5 Above Ground Projections 5-8 5.5.1 Balconies 5-8 5.5.2 Bay Windows, Towers, Oriels, and Colonnades 5-10 5.5.3 Porches 5-11 5.5.4 Steps And Ramps 5-12 5.5.5 Permanent Doors And …

13. Six Caryatides, or marble women, clad in flowing robes, support the portico of the Temple of Hercules, but the porticos and colonnades of the other structures are formed of massive Doric and Ionic pillars, whose flutings and capitals are still measurably perfect, notwithstanding the centuries that have gone over them and the sieges they have suffered.

14. 5-5 5.4.1 Areaways 5-6 5.4.2 Vaults 5-6 5.4.2.1 Uses 5-7 5.4.2.2 Placement and Covers 5-8 5.5 Above Ground Projections 5-8 5.5.1 Balconies 5-8 5.5.2 Bay Windows, Towers, Oriels, and Colonnades 5-11 5.5.3 Porches 5-12 5.5.4 Steps And Ramps 5-12 5.5.5 Permanent Doors And Windows 5-12 5.5.6 Awnings 5-13 5.5.7 Canopies 5-14 5.5.8 Marquees APPENDIX A