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Acumen |
Sharpness of mind,
the ability to judge well
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Aedicule |
An opening in a wall, such as a window or a niche, framed by columns or
pilasters and sometimes surmounted by a pediment (from Latin, “little
temple”).
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Architrave |
The moulded frame
surrounding a door or window
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Bangle |
A
fine detail surrounding a column just below the top capital |
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Base |
The bottom feature of a column |
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Capital |
The crowning feature of
a column
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Cill |
A moulding fixed
horizontally at the base of a window or door (also spelt Sill)
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Column |
A
vertical shaft with moulded base and capital
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Corbels |
Supporting members projecting from the face of a wall usually found under an
eave or large cornice detail
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Cornice |
A
decorative feature found under the eaves of a roof or at the join between
walls and ceiling in a room
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Dado |
A
lower part of an interior/exterior wall
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Dentils |
A
series of small rectangular blocks (tooth-like) spaced in a band to decorate
a cornice
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Eaves |
The underside of a projecting roof
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Fluting |
Concave, vertical grooves in the surface of a column
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Keystone |
A
wedge-shaped stone in the crown of an arch or in the center of a lintel to
lock the structure
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Lintel |
The horizontal top piece of a window or door opening, requiring strength in
order to support the wall above it
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Parapet |
A cornice-type detail that is fixed to the outside of a wall as an
alternative to an eave
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Pedestal |
See Base
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Pediment |
A
decorative feature, usually triangular but often segmental, found on gable ends, above porticoes, doors, windows or aedicules. The upper part of the pediment is formed by a cornice moulding. Some
pediments are split to receive some ornament or finial in the center, and
occasionally the open ends of the split pediments are terminated in some
form of scrolled block.
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Plinth |
See Base
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Quoin |
A
squared moulding at the corner of a building or other architectural
feature. Quoins are usually staggered so that on a given elevation one sees
alternately headers and stretchers.
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Sill |
See Cill
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Volute |
A
spiral, scroll-like ornament found on Ionic capitals and some brackets. It
is likely that the Ionic capital was initially inspired by the head and
horns of a ram. |
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