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nogging Meaning in Bengali







nogging'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.


In construction, a nogging or nogging piece (England, Australia), dwang (Scotland, Central and lower North Island, New Zealand and South Island, New Zealand).


similar materials in other forms of English include dwang, nog, noggin, and nogging.


wooden framing A horizontal framing member in a wall or floor also called a nogging piece or dwang Nogai (ISO 639-2 nog), a Turkic language of the North Caucasus.


brick nogging-filled half timber construction with a beaded clapboard-covered main facade and a steeply pitched roof.


" The exterior of the brick nogging (infill.


early 19th centuries; this partly based on hand-hewn framing and brick nogging (18th-century insulation) within the walls.


It is timber framed with cruck construction and painted brick nogging, and has a thatched roof.


It utilizes balloon framing, and the brick nogging utilized in the earlier two sections is absent.


(Wynnstay Farmhouse) — 1611 The building is timber-framed with plastered nogging on a stone plinth.


Farmhouse) — Early 17th century The farmhouse is timber-framed with brick nogging on a stone plinth, and has a slate roof.


made later to the rear of the cottage, which is timber-framed with brick nogging.


The house has a timber frame and red brick nogging.


It is of frame construction with brick nogging.


The building is basically timber-framed with brick nogging, much of which has been replaced by brick painted to resemble timber framing.


It is timber framed with brick nogging on a rendered plinth, the south wall has been rebuilt in brick and rendered.


Two of the faces of the house are timber-framed with painted brick nogging.


century A pair of timber-framed cottages on a brick plinth with brick nogging and a tiled roof.


64425 (Bath House) Late 16th century A timber-framed farmhouse with brick nogging on a tall sandstone plinth and with a tiled roof.


about 1785, and is a two-story, Georgian style frame dwelling with brick nogging.



Synonyms:

brickwork;

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