चिमनीपीस Meaning in English
चिमनीपीस शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : chimneypiece
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
चिमनियांचिम्प
चिंप्स
चिन
ठुड्डी
ठोड़ा
ठोड़ा ठोड़ा
ठोड़ी
चिन चिन
चिन संगीत
ठोड़ी संगीत
ठोड़ी का पट्टा
चिन अप
चिन वागिंग
चीन
चिमनीपीस इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
The Directors' Court Room featured a marble chimneypiece with bearded term figures that supported the mantel shelf and an overmantel bas-relief panel, Britannia Receiving the Riches of the East, under a pediment, the work of Michael Rysbrack (1728–30).
Some of the grander rooms have fine chimneypieces and wood panelling, but others are "little more than cupboards".
The chimneypiece in this room is decorated with female caryatids and bears the arms of Elizabeth I; its plaster would originally have been painted and gilded, and traces of this still remain.
In the Duke's sitting room a glass case over the chimneypiece contained the best of his collection of engraved gems and Renaissance and Baroque medallions.
Some of these stored items were auctioned by Sotheby's on 5–7 October 2010, including five William Kent chimneypieces from Devonshire House described by the auctioneer Lord Dalmeny as being of special interest and value: "You can't buy them because they are all in listed buildings now.
A carved oak chimneypiece, commemorating Hicks' gift, was installed in Hicks Hall in 1618.
One chimneypiece followed a design of Serlio's.
For example, in the hamlet of Nan-sous-Thil (Côte-d'Or, France), the villagers were required to bake their bread at the four banal, as at home they were permitted only a small oven placed under the hood of the chimneypiece, for baking "gâteau et flan".
The interior had carved marble chimneypieces, many elaborate ceilings and plasterwork of a high quality.
Pedimented chimneypieces in the house are in the tectonic manner popularized by William Kent.
Shortly thereafter the architect James Wyatt, not yet made famous by his Pantheon, London, worked on decorations in new rooms in the house (1770–71), where doorcases and chimneypieces in Wyatt's early neoclassical style and the decoration of the Library reflect his presence.
Within five years Thomas had purchased a nearby cement works and had extended the range of products sold to include cement, lime, bricks, chimneypieces and many other items.
The massive chimneypiece in the drawing room is classically designed, believed to be inspired by one of the great Italian architects of 16th-century Mannerism, Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola.