The lintel twists with numerals, the four walls buckling with crookbacked joists until ghosts hang homeless in the lurching levels. |
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They were so big that their heads came up past the lintel of the entranceway door. |
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The low door lintel in the upper room was suitably covered to prevent accidents! |
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A door was supposed to have a transom and a lintel and a keyhole and stiles and a handle. |
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Above each doorway a window with sidelights is capped by a soapstone lintel. |
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The post and lintel were just frames for a set of double door gates wrought of thick lumber and braced with iron. |
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He traversed the gamut of the masonry trades from foundation to lintel, bridge abutment to gravestone, and from skyscraper to curbstone. |
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In our earlier discussion of trabeation, we pointed out the lintel as the weak element of the structure. |
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The lintel is carved in only one lithic piece and we can see four busts and the nobiliary coat of arms. |
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The seven-foot lintel stone and hearth in the kitchen were exposed, and the original table, cupboard, and sugan chairs are still in use. |
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Failure occurs only when the material is too weak or the lintel is too long. |
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Very close cooperation resulted in better solutions, particularly regarding the lintel structures. |
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The lintel shows Jesus carrying the cross on the way to Calvary. |
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The first option is to use SURETOUCH jamb and lintel units on the sides and tops of openings. |
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The lintel consists of seven joggled stones, on top of which rests a relieving arch. |
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The drive units can be mounted against the lintel or on the door leaf itself, either on the hinge side or on opposite side. |
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Along the lintel run decorative friezes and the front is inlaid with red and green marble. |
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Usually, the steel angle or steel lintel is below the stone surround. |
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Double seals at the lintel and floor increase door sealing and thus effectively reduce energy losses. |
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In The Music Lesson it is possible to see that the joists are supported at the left on a timber lintel or wall-plate, running across the heads of the windows. |
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An 80cm x 80cm x 6mm angle iron was placed in the mold before the lintel was poured. |
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The facade of the church is decorated with a portal lintel, surmounted by a small niche. |
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Externally plastering will be done only up to lintel level, below which there will be stone cladding. |
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They shall take some of its blood and apply it to the two doorposts and the lintel of every house in which they partake of the lamb. |
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If the stone or precast concrete element is a single piece that functions as a lintel to support the masonry above, the flashing should be installed over the lintel. |
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The posts must support the lintel and its loads without crushing or buckling. |
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A stone lintel covered the access from the living area to the kitchen. |
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Stone has this property and is more versatile in its use as a post than as a lintel. |
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The original fireplace in the hall proved to have an elegant curved back and a decorative fireback of herringbone brick and was surmounted by a massive pine lintel. |
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Two carved limestone blocks from a frieze and a lintel that formed part of the middle niche at the eastern side of the Umayyad palace at al-Qastal. |
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It continued to be used as a lintel for the southern portals of the Dome of the Rock for an unspecified period, which led to it being disfigured with cement. |
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Then, fix 3 inch angle bracket 2 inches above the window lintel and make sure you have a good fixing in straps or brick. |
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Such is the case with this lintel, which possesses a Moorish arch with the coats of arms of the Church and the Holy Inquisition: the crossed keys are crowned with an ecclesiastic biretta. |
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The door is surmounted by a stone lintel and, being less than 1.5 m high, the visitor must stoop slightly in order to enter the narthex and the church interior. |
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The opening above the lintel is flanked by seated figures, while the lintel itself is carved on its underside with figures of a goddess and of animals. |
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The post and lintel were not fundamentally altered until the production of cast-iron columns, which were stronger yet smaller in circumference, thus greatly reducing the mass and weight of buildings. |
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The period features are part of this general atmosphere: exposed woodwork and beams, stone corbels, old parquet floors, impressive granite fireplaces crowned with a thick solid wood lintel, recesses, and old trimmed doors. |
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If the team decides not to do so, this extra lintel stays out of the game. |
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The wooden components such as the columns, beams, purlins, lintel and bracket sets are connected by tenon joints in a flexible, earthquake-resistant way. |
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In late 1998, the Denver Art Museum voluntarily returned a carved Maya wooden lintel taken from the Classic period site of El Zotz in the Petén region of Guatemala, 12 miles north-west of Tikal. |
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Note that the jamb and lintel units are identical. |
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Rubber seals made of flexible EPDM not only protect against cold, moisture, and dirt in the lintel area, but are also effective on the sides and the door leaves. |
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Along with vaults, they gradually replaced the traditional post and lintel construction which makes use of the column and architrave. |
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Mesopotamian architecture was characterized by the use of brick, lintel and the introduction of construction elements like arc and vault. |
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Hut 3 has a surviving porchway, with the two jamb stones still upright, although the lintel has fallen. |
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Such is her shame and despair that she hangs herself in a barn, or perhaps from the great kitchen fireplace lintel, or else she drowns herself in a shallow pool. |
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A lintel or beam may have four inches of bearing upon the wall. |
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