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naves Meaning in Tamil ( naves வார்த்தையின் தமிழ் அர்த்தம்)



Noun:

கிறித்தவக் கோயிலின் நடுக் கூடம்,



naves's Usage Examples:

Its general plan is that of a Greek cross, with two great naves and three aisles, twenty side-chapels and a magnificent high altar supported by marble columns and surrounded by a tumbago balustrade with sixty-two tumbago statues carrying elaborate candelabra made from a rich alloy of gold, silver and copper.


Fenetre de Champorcher (Cogne to Champorcher), bridle path (E) Col de Vaudet (Isere Valley to the Val Grisanche), foot path Col de Bardoney (Cogne to Pont Canavese), snow (E).


The church of St Mary is a fine Gothic structure of the 13th century with five naves and a lofty spire.


They have told me since that I was singing some insane doggerel about " The Last Man Left Alive!The work by which he is known is the Fable of the Bees, published first in 1705 under the title of The Grumbling Hive, or Knaves Turn'd Honest (two hundred doggerel couplets).


of Halstead is Little Maplestead, where the church is the latest in date of the four churches with round naves extant in England, being perhaps of 12th-century foundation, but showing early Decorated work in the main.


In 1851 he published a Histoire des etas scandinaves, which is especially valuable for clear arrangement and for the trustworthiness of its facts.


The work by which he is known is the Fable of the Bees, published first in 1705 under the title of The Grumbling Hive, or Knaves Turn'd Honest (two hundred doggerel couplets).


William had not so understood the new invention of a united ministry as binding him to take into his service a united ministry of men whom he regarded as fools and knaves.


oblong, having a single row of columns dividing the length into two naves and terminating to the west in a semicircular apse.


Another interesting building is the Gothic chapel of Notre-Dame, with three naves, rebuilt by Louis XI.


It is true that at all times churches have been put to secular uses; in periods of unrest, as among the Nestorian Christians now, they were sometimes built to serve at need as fortresses; their towers were used for beacons, their naves for meetings on secular affairs.


The façade is fine, and the interior, divided into three naves by columns, with galleries over the aisles, has fortunately not been restored; the vaulting of the crypt has, however, been covered with modern stucco.


It has two naves parallel, originally for the use of the nuns and the parishioners respectively.





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