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nogged Meaning in Bengali



Adjective:

পোশাক পরান,





nogged's Usage Examples:

Brick nog, (nogging or nogged, beam filling) is a construction technique in which bricks are used to fill the vacancies in a wooden frame.


Nogging, an architectural term, may refer to: Brick nog, (nogged, nogging) term used for the filling in-between wall framing in buildings Nogging or dwang.


and 1854 by enslaved people: the one-story frame slave house with brick-nogged walls; a small stone smokehouse; the remains of a summer kitchen; and a.


It dates to the Colonial era, and is a long 1 1/2-story, six bay, brick-nogged frame dwelling.


The Oliver House dates to about 1800, and is a 1 1/2-story brick-nogged heavy timber frame building.


grade-II-listed barn remains which dates from the late 16th century, and is brick nogged with a timber frame.


Spaces between wall studs are nogged with brick in the interior and exterior walls.


It is partly brick nogged, and partly weatherboarded, and stands on a sandstone plinth.


It is timber-framed, partly on a stone plinth; it is partly brick nogged, and partly limewashed.


foundation, with external brick walls in colonial bond and internal walls brick nogged.


in the Deutsches Museum in Munich) the Feuergezäher Vault (the oldest "nogged" (ausgemauert) underground mining space in Central Europe) the Rathstiefste.


detailing and fitments are colonial Georgian while the walls are brick nogged, a building technique once common in the Hawkesbury district, but now rare.


Late 17th century The farm building is mainly in brick, with some brick nogged timber-framing and a slate roof.


rubble laid in a clay mortar and then plastered over with white chalk or nogged with bricks.


The building was partially nogged with ballast brick, particularly beneath window openings, sheathed with.


Apart from the right gable, which is brick nogged, it has been encased in limewashed brick.


transported a wooden cottage from Fitzroy to South Yarra and then had it brick-nogged.


with fittings designed by Robin Dods; an 1860s timber framed and brick nogged house and various other 1860s buildings.


Inside is a timber-framed and brick nogged partition wall.



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