Crossword clues for wingspread
Wiktionary
n. The distance between the extreme tips of the wings of a bird, insect or aircraft.
WordNet
n. distance between the tips of the wings (as of a bird or insect) when fully extended
linear distance between the extremities of an airfoil [syn: wingspan]
Wikipedia
Wingspread, also known as the Herbert F. Johnson House, is a house designed by architect Frank Lloyd Wright for Herbert Fisk Johnson, Jr., and built in 1938–39 in the village of Wind Point near Racine, Wisconsin. Its construction was overseen by a young John Lautner. The living room is the center of the home, and four wings extend from it to four "zones": the master bedroom, the children’s rooms, the kitchen and servants' quarters, and the guestrooms/garage. The living room resembles a gigantic dome, and features a tall brick multiple fireplace rising from its center.
Johnson was also Wright's client for the Johnson Wax Headquarters Building in Racine, which was built at about the same time.
Wingspread is no longer a residence; it was donated by Johnson and his wife to The Johnson Foundation in 1959 as an international educational conference facility. It is also open to the public for tours.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975, and designated a National Historic Landmark in 1989.
It is at 33 East Four Mile Road in Racine.
Usage examples of "wingspread".
Equipped with a fourteen- to sixteen-foot wingspread, sharp talons, and fangs like a snake, fisherhawks were known to raid seabound vessels of small children, women, halflings, and the occasional dwarf as well as the fish it stripped from the sea.
He saw a buzzard floating along in the pale blue above, drifting and floating, and he thought of the smell of dead men and chicken hawks swooping down and the only eagle he'd ever seen, in captivity, back in Brewer, a vast wingspread, a murderous eve.
The little flivver, due to small wingspread and not inconsiderable weight, would glide about as well as a brickbat.
But we who have bathed in Time, and been reborn as children of the earth and inheritors of Eternity, drift gently in rivers of sand and streams of darkness, knowing the bombardment from the stars whose emanations have taken millions of years to rain upon the land and seek us out in our plantations of eternally wrapped souls like great seeds beneath the marbled layers and the bas-relief skeletons of reptile birds that fly on sandstone, with wingspreads a million years wide and as deep as a single breath.
Hulions have been seen with wingspreads four times the height of a man, beasts so large that their jaws could snap a man in half.
Pteranodons with thirty-foot wingspreads sounded like giant crows with asthma.
The natural disposition of both tribes was peaceful, so Synapo meekly left his hook pointed aft and took up his station two wingspreads to the right of Sarco as Sarco circled around the center of the dome far below.