That Have Walls In Part: Massive walls provided the buttressing, although buttress strips on the outside gave visible expression to this func¬tion ; these walls also made a clearstory possible. The vault itself was changed from a four part to a six part vault by the addition above the inter¬mediate piers of extra transverse ribs. These ribs created four instead of two triangles of vault¬ing next to the walls of the church, and therefore made the intermediate pier carry part of the weight of the nave vaults in addition to part of the aisle vaults.
When choosing climbers for planting against houses or high walls, the direction that have walls in part they will face must be considered since climbers on shaded walls will get little direct sunshine; those on some sunny walls may get too much; and those on walls with sun for part of the day may be exposed to cold winds. The problem hardly arises with fences, since plants quickly rise above them. The soil close to house walls can be dry, and until climbers become established they may need regular watering.See Also Depot Walls:But in the same way that SCI-Arc ventures out of its former freight depot walls, the public can wander in.
The school's exhibits and lectures are free, and there's an open-door policy during the day.
With a visitor's badge from the north entrance reception desk, guests can amble through the studios and galleries, and witness the school's founding principle - a "college without walls" - in action.
They are expensive to build but need essentially no upkeep. Walls are of especial value for supporting terraces and other places where soil must be retained. Such supporting walls may be built with cement or be dry walls made without cement.
Informal groups of trees and shrubs are good as "walls" where space permits. •
On The Other Hand See Ancient Walls:Working under Schliemann's supervision, some 150 workers with picks and shovels opened a trench across the site. Schliemann recorded in his journal that within an hour of digging he came upon the ruins of ancient walls. In the first three years he uncovered fortress walls, buildings, large numbers of coins and potsherds, and a trea¬sure of gold and silver jewelry and vessels.
Morphology. The ancient three declensions of tbe noun are still kept, but much simplified. There is a tendency to transfer the ancient con¬sonant stems of the third declension, especially abstract nouns in -si(s), to the first (or fem¬inine) declension, and to make ancient feminine nouns into neuters in -« (from the suffix -ion), askheir becoming kheri, "hand." Irregular nouns are regularized. The ancient dative case is topped and the genitive restricted to the pos¬sessive use.
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