bichrome उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- For the construction were used sandstone and bricks to give a bichrome appearance to the exterior ( such as in the upper fa�ade ), a feature common also in Liguria and Tuscany in the Middle Ages.
- During the Cypro-Geometric I Period ( 1050 950 BC ), the following types of pottery were produced on Cyprus other than the Bichrome : White Painted, Plain White, and Black Slip potteries.
- There are also sherds of other kinds of Cypriot pottery, including Bichrome Wheel-made, Monochrome, Red Lustrous Wheel-made, and White Painted V / VI . Mycenean pottery and such from Upper Egypt were also found.
- The fa�ade shows the typical bichrome marble decoration of the Pistoiese Romanesque style, executed in the mid-12th century by Gruamonte and his brother Adeodatus, who was also responsible for the sculptures and for the portal's architrave.
- The Romanesque fa�ade, dating to the early 12th-century shows typical features of the Pisane medieval architecture, such as the blind arcades, the lozenges and the use of bichrome stones ( present also in the city's cathedral ).
- His years of pictoral research of the European masters gave him significant technical mastery, and a knowledge of space in which large monochrome or bichrome zones gave his form a monumental feel, with volumes interacting with light and shade in an abstract manner.
- Up until that time, a distinctive type pottery called " Bichrome Ware, " first found in Tel Ajjul in Palestine by the archaeologist Sir Flinders Petrie, was believed to originate in Palestine after which it was exported to sites in the eastern Mediterranean.
- More powerful Drafters, known as'Bichromes', can use two colors of Luxin, and people who can use three or more colors are known as'Polychromes .'Polychromes are the most highly-sought-after Drafters for any Satrapy's army.
- "' Philistine Bichrome ware "'is an archaeological term coined by William F . Albright in 1924 which describes pottery production in a general region associated with the Philistine settlements during the Iron Age I period in ancient Canaan ( ca . 1200-1000 BCE ).
- So we see, for example, a bichrome Canaanite decanter in Klassen s article on Sidonian Greek-inscribed glass, or the excavations at Cana in Kloppenborg s article, but none at all of the Theodotos inscription whose letters are analyzed in a way that is hard to visualize without a picture.