सीढ़ीदार घर Meaning in English
सीढ़ीदार घर शब्द का अंग्रेजी अर्थ : terraced house
ऐसे ही कुछ और शब्द
टेराकोटाटेराकस
टेराफ
टेराफ्लॉप
टेराफ्लॉप्स
टेराफॉर्म
टेराफॉर्म्स
टेराकिंग
टेरापिन
टेरापिन्स
टेरेरिया
टेराटोमास
स्थलीय
स्थलीय गतिशील समय
स्थलीय मार्गदर्शन
सीढ़ीदार-घर इसके अंग्रेजी अर्थ का उदाहरण
There are 90 detached households, 68 semi-detached households, 28 terraced households and 9 flats.
In the 1970s the terraced houses covering the site were demolished.
Dalry was intensively developed in the 19th century and contains a mix of traditional tenements, "colonies" (terraced houses where one floor has an entrance at one side, and the other floor has an entrance on the other side; street names follow the buildings rather than the roads between them).
Detached houses dominate, but there are also some terraced houses.
West Kensington is primarily a residential area consisting mainly of Victorian terraced houses, many of which are subdivided into flats.
He was involved in a real property project development, of which the most significant parts were a gypsum factory and Ķīpsala terraced houses, amongst others.
Typically, the builder lays the wall along a property line dividing two terraced houses, so that one half of the wall's thickness lies on each side.
Originating in London as early as the 11th century, requirements for terraced houses to have a dividing wall substantially capable of acting as a fire break have been applied in some form or other.
The village consists mainly of cul-de-sacs, with inter-linking ginnels, back alleys and housing ranges from detached houses, semi-detached houses, terraced houses, and flats.
Freemantle began to be built up in the 1850s and is still mostly small Victorian semi detached and terraced houses.
The area ranges from streets of terraced houses near the city towards Layerthorpe via large Victorian "villas" on East Parade and Heworth Green to older houses along Heworth Village and 1930s semi-detached houses on Stockton Lane.
Thus a great town house, by its large size and design, accentuated its owner's power by its contrast with the monotony of the smaller terraced houses surrounding it.
Most of the great detached houses of noblemen which existed in the West End of London, where even the grandest persons often lived in terraced houses, including Devonshire House, Norfolk House and Chesterfield House, are today numbered amongst England's thousands of lost houses; Lansdowne House lost its front to a street-widening scheme.