(isim) alınlık (bina)

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pediment
In classical style the low pitched gable above the entablature; since Renaissance times, any roof end
In classical architecture, a low-pitched gable above a portico; also a similar feature above doors in homes It may be straight or curved, "broken'' in the center, or solid
An ornamental crest running across the top of tall 18th century piece such as high boy or chests
A gradually sloping bedrock surface located at the base of fluvial-eroded mountain range Found in arid locations and normally covered by fluvial deposits
An architectural term for the triangular end on a roof; also used to describe the decorative carved pieces on the cornices of bureau bookcases, tallboys, high cabinets etc
a triangular gable between a horizontal entablature and a sloping roof
An ornamental crest running across the top of tall 18th century piece such as highboy or chests
the triangular face of a roof gable in its classical form
(Geology) A broad, gently sloping rock surface at the base of a steeper slope, often covered with alluvium, formed primarily by erosion
Low-pitched gable over porticos, doors, windows
A gently sloping surface, usually covered with gravel, the result of erosion
equivalent in Classical architecture of a gable; a triangular head or topping
A pediment is a large triangular structure built over a door or window as a decoration. a three-sided part above the entrance to a building, especially on the buildings of ancient Greece (periment (16-17 centuries), perhaps from pyramid). In Classical architecture, a triangular gable crowning a portico or facade. The pediment was the crowning feature of the Greek temple front. The pediment's triangular wall surface, or tympanum, was often decorated with sculpture. The Romans adapted the pediment as a purely decorative form to finish doors, windows, and niches, sometimes using a series of alternating triangular and segmentally curved pediments, a motif revived in the Italian High Renaissance. Baroque-era designers developed many varieties of broken, scrolled, and reverse-curved pediments. In geology, any relatively flat surface of bedrock (exposed or lightly covered with soil or gravel) that occurs at the base of a mountain or as a plain having no associated mountain. Pediments are most conspicuous in basin-and-range-type desert areas throughout the world, but they also occur in humid areas. In the tropics, the surfaces tend to be covered with soil and obscured by vegetation. Many tropical river towns are situated on pediments, which offer easier building sites than the steep hillsides above or the river marshes below
The triangular space formed by the roof cornices on a Greek or Roman temple
In Classical architecture, a triangular piece of wall above the entablature
Large ornamental detail over a door or passage, often triangular in shape similar to the gable end of a building
the architectural structure above a window, door, or porch -- either triangular or segmental (an arc, or segment of a circle); an open pediment has the center of its top missing, and a broken pediment has the center of its base missing
{i} triangular form on the front of a building that creates the peak of the roof; triangular form resembling a gable located above church or window
a classical architectural element consisting of a triangular section or gable found above the horizontal superstructure (entablature) which lies immediately upon the columns
A broad surface at the base of a receding mountain The pediment develops when running water erodes most of the mass of the mountain
(isim) alınlık (bina)
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