释义 |
campanilecam‧pa‧ni‧le /ˌkæmpəˈniːli/ noun [countable] campanileOrigin: 1600-1700 Italian campana ‘bell’, from Late Latin; ➔ CAMPANOLOGY - A Medieval campanile has been added to one end of the Mausoleum and a Choir at the other.
- In front of this again is an octagonal baptistery and further west still a later campanile.
- Jasper stood looking at the bell rope which came out of a small square aperture at what was the base of the campanile.
- The campaniles were separate but not generally as tall as Lombard ones.
- The adjacent campanile is also interesting and is a combination of Norman and Byzantine work.
- The great campanile, over 300 feet in height, was built between the twelfth and sixteenth centuries.
- They were also responsible for the reliefs decorating the campanile of the cathedral in Split.
- Today only the superb campanile and a section of the right side of the church remain from the original fourteenth-century building.
► Architecturearcade, nounarch, nounarchitect, nounarchitecture, nounatrium, nounbailey, nounbastion, nouncampanile, nouncapital, nouncaryatid, nouncloistered, adjectivecolonial, adjectiveconservationist, nounCorinthian, adjectivecornice, noundolmen, noundome, noundomed, adjectiveDoric, adjectivefloor plan, nounflying buttress, nounfolly, nounGeorgian, adjectiveGothic, adjectiveground plan, nounIonic, adjectivemodernism, nounmonolith, nounmonument, nounmonumental, adjectiveNorman, adjectiveobelisk, nounopen-plan, adjectivepedestal, nounpediment, nounperistyle, nounpitched, adjectiveplinth, nounplot, nounportico, nounquadrangle, nounrambling, adjectiverampart, nounrococo, adjectiveRomanesque, adjectivescreen, nounspan, nounsplit-level, adjectivesquare, nounstonework, nounterrace, nountracery, nountransept, nountruss, nounvaulted, adjectivevaulting, nounvestibule, noun a high bell tower that is usually separate from any other building |