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coved
coved, ppl. a. (kəʊvd) [f. cove n.1 and v. + -ed.] Formed into a cove; arched, vaulted.1756 C. Lucas Ess. Waters II. 130 The spring..is surrounded with a coved wall of about three feet high. 1779 H. Swinburne Trav. through Spain xliv. (T.), The mosques..are rounded into domes and coved roofs. 1853 R...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Coved ceiling
A coved ceiling is a ceiling that has had the visual appearance of the point where the ceiling meets the walls improved by the addition of coving.
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Coving (urban planning)
Another area where coved design has made advancement is in the realm of Urban Redevelopment. The coved plan has much better walking connectivity and is far safer with less interaction between vehicles and people.
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coving
▪ I. coving, n. (ˈkəʊvɪŋ) [f. cove n.1] 1. An arched or vaulted piece of building, as the curved soffit of a projecting upper part of a building (see quot. 1703), the arching of a coved ceiling; coved work.1703 T. N. City & C. Purchaser 122 When Houses are built projecting forth over the Ground-plot...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Bergère
A bergère may have a flat, raked back, in which case it is à la reine, or, more usually in Louis XV furnishings, it has a coved back, en cabriolet. A bergère with a low coved back that sweeps without a break into the armrests is a marquise.
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camp ceiling
camp ceiling Arch. [? from its shape resembling the roof of a camp tent.] ‘A ceiling formed by an inclination of the wall on each side towards the plane surface in the middle, so as to form something like a coved ceiling. Most frequently used in garrets’ (Crabb Techn. Dict. 1823).
Oxford English Dictionary
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Grant Van Valkenburg House
many elements characteristic of Craftsman-style bungalows, including built-in furniture, leaded glass cabinet doors, wide baseboards, picture rails, coved
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ellipsoidal
ellipsoidal, a. (ɛlɪpˈsɔɪdəl) [f. prec. + -al1.] Having the nature or shape of an ellipsoid.1831 Brewster Optics xli. §201. 344 A concave ellipsoidal reflector. 1845 Todd & Bowman Phys. Anat. I. 213 Some vesicles are..ovoidal, or ellipsoidal. 1849 Murchison Siluria iii. (1867) 58 The Llandillo forma...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Malek Theatre
As of 2009 the interior was mostly original, with Art Deco style light fixtures and coved ceilings. The interior has a high degree of integrity with Art Deco features such as curved walls, coved ceilings backlit with neon, bent neon fixtures, stylized
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Castlewood (Chesterfield, Virginia)
Also on the property is a contributing frame, pyramidal roofed structure with a coved cornice that may have housed a dairy.
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Handforth Hall
Under a coved gable by the porch entrance there is an ornately carved inscription on the lintel, reading:
"THIS HAULLE WAS BUYLDED IN THE YEARE OF OUR
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Building at 6 and 7 Public Square
facade retains not only its decorative brickwork but also its cast-iron columns, recessed entrance, plate-glass windows, and its interior retains its coved
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Zone Point
The origin of the name Zone Point first appears in the 1597 map of the River Fal by Baptista Boazio as Savenheer, or the long coved point.
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St Werburgh's Mount, Chester
The upper two storeys of number 19 contain an oriel window on a coved apron, which stretches through both storeys. They both have six-light oriel windows above coved jettying.
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St. Brigid's Church, Straffan
Above the altar is a coved ceiling with acanthus-leaf centrepiece encircled by grape-laden vine tendrils.
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