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Classical entranceway
Answer for the clue "Classical entranceway ", 7 letters:
portico
Alternative clues for the word portico
Word definitions for portico in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a porch or entrance to a building consisting of a covered and often columned area [also: porticoes (pl)]
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
A portico is a porch leading to the entrance of a building with a roof structure over a walkway. Buildings named after their porticos include: Santa Maria in Campitelli , in Rome, called Santa Maria in Portico Porticus Aemilia , in Rome, is an ancient structure ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1600, from Italian portico , from Latin porticus "colonnade, arcade, covered walk, porch," from porta "gate" (see port (n.1)). Especially of the Painted Porch in Athens.
Usage examples of portico.
They had arrived by rented coach, bidden to wait under the portico, and identified themselves as Inspector Edgars and three constables from Scotland Yard.
He assigned Michelangelo a drawing desk on the portico between seventeen-year-old Torrigiani and twenty-nine-year old Andrea Sansovino, who had been apprenticed to Antonio Pollaiuolo and whose commissioned work was to be seen in Santo Spirito.
The brooklet was still there and the old pillared portico, where the stone showed from under the crumbling stucco and the roses had pushed their way through the stone paving and entwined the columns.
Bernard had noticed a large house of some pretensions to architectural display, namely, unnecessarily projecting eaves, giving it a mushroomy aspect, wooden mouldings at various available points, and a grandiose arched portico.
Much of the temple was ruined, but the severe broad front was whole as well as a large hall behind it, a hall from which a thin remote chant could be heard: across this front stretched what for want of the proper term Stephen thought of as a portico, a narthex, and in this narthex a monk in a worn old saffron robe was sitting by a brazier.
As they approached it up the now-well-tended drive, both noticed that the ivy had been stripped off, the bricks repointed, and that a smart new portico had been built over the entrance.
And Ralph sat down on the trellised portico, stretching out his elegant rosetted shoes, and laughing.
An unhappy combination which wouldat least from the front aspect of the Sacra Viabe vastly improved by the addition of a proper and imposing temple portico and pediment.
Two consuls and the wife of a chocolate manufacturer put in a petition for a fire alarm, which was immediately granted, although the fire department was right behind the Orphanage and its training tower overlooked all the silver firs, promising the ivy on white house fronts and all the many cornices and porticoes that knew Schinkel from hearsay to dispatch two fire brigades, within twenty-seven seconds.
Pleased by this image, Silvester had stomped out through the portico and lurched down the single step on to turf and soil.
As he entered the tablinum, he heard a voice from the porticoes of the peristyle beyond, which, musical as it was, sounded displeasingly on his ear--it was the voice of the young and beautiful Glaucus, and for the first time an involuntary thrill of jealousy shot through the breast of the Egyptian.
As he looked through the telephoto lens of the viewfinder, he moved the camera from the portico, sweeping across the facade of the cathedral, then panning across the crowd of tourists and pilgrims, as if capturing the entire scene on video, an amateur cinematographer.
This bath, in fact, had been dedicated by Antoninus Caracalla, who bathed in it himself and opened it to the public, but the portico was left unbuilt, and this was added after his death by this spurious Antoninus, though actually completed by Alexander.
Moments later, it stopped gently in a curving driveway before a gracefully understated jade-stone portico: the sprawling Lordglen House of State.
The charming little grey-painted cottage with its portico over its narrow front stoop held by square-hewed though slender pillars, the intricate spool-turned overhang from the portico roof, the bronze pull-bell in the graceful door, the multi-paned front windows with their rounded, arched tops, heavily lace-curtained and from behind which curtains Vernice was probably even now peeping, wondering what on earth the arrival of a black man at 242 Flower Street and in a surrey!