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crenel
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Bretèche
The open ones were accessed from the battlement's wall walk, or from a crenel.
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crenelet
crenelet rare. (ˈkrɛnɪlɪt) [f. crenel n. + -et1.] A small crenel or embrasure.1860 Reade Cloister & H. xliii. II. 278 With far more freedom..than they could shoot..through the sloping crenelets of the higher towers.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Merlon
The space between two merlons is called a crenel, and a succession of merlons and crenels is a crenellation.
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Wagendrischelhorn
It separates the 2055 metre high Mayrbergscharte from the southern Stadelhorn and an unnamed crenel from the northern Großes Häuselhorn at a height of
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crannel
† crannel Obs. Also cranel(l, crannell. [app. f. F. cran: see cranny; perh. identical with F. crenel (12th c. in Littré), Pr. cranel, dim. of cran, which is however chiefly a term of fortification: see crenel, carnel.] A small opening or hole; a cranny, crevice, chink.1533 Q. Cath. Parr tr. Erasm. C...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Helen's Tower
The parapets on the southern, western and northern sides are each incised by one central crenel.
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crena
‖ crena Bot., Zool., etc. (ˈkriːnə) [mod.L. crēna incision, notch, corresp. to It. crena notch, nocke (Florio, 1598), F. crene, crenne (16th c.); R. Estienne Petit Dict. 1543 has ‘un cren ou crenne, crena’. The history of this word is very obscure; L. crēna incision, notch, was formerly read in Plin...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Embrasure
An embrasure (or crenel or crenelle; sometimes called gunhole in the domain of gunpowder-era architecture) is the opening in a battlement between two
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creneled
crenelled, creneled, ppl. a. (ˈkrɛnəld) [f. crenel v. + -ed. Cf. F. crénelé (12th c. in Littré).] 1. Embattled, crenellated; having embrasures.[c 1330 R. Brunne Chron. Wace (Rolls) 14646 Castels..bretaxed and carneled. 1377 Langl. P. Pl. B. vi. 78 See kerneled.] 1832 Blackw. Mag. XXXI. 787 Crenelled...
Oxford English Dictionary
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crenelle
▪ I. crenel, crenelle, n. (ˈkrɛnəl, kriːˈnɛl) Forms: 5 (pl. creneuls, creneaux), 8–9 crennel, 9 crenel, -ell(e. [a. OF. (12th c.) crenel, pl. creniaus (mod.F. créneau, -eaux). OF. variants were kernel, karnel, whence also Eng. carnel, kernel q.v. The Fr. word is app. dim. of cren, cran notch (of whi...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Battlement
The word crenel derives from the ancient French cren (modern French cran), Latin crena, meaning a notch, mortice or other gap cut out often to receive The modern French word for crenel is créneau, also used to describe a gap of any kind, for example a parking space at the side of the road between two
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Step function
See also
Crenel function
Piecewise
Sigmoid function
Simple function
Step detection
Heaviside step function
Piecewise-constant valuation
References
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cranny
▪ I. cranny, n.1 (ˈkrænɪ) Forms: (5 crayne), 5–7 crany, 6–7 cranie, craney, 7 crannie, -ey, (craine), 7– cranny. [app. related to F. cran (in Cotgr. cren) ‘a notch, cleft, niche, or jag’, a crack in metal, a transverse fissure in strata, etc.; but the etymology and form-history present many difficul...
Oxford English Dictionary
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