Yes.
Typically, doorknobs are 36 inches above the floor.
There are 2 common ones.Entry (enn-tree), n.1. An act of going or coming in.2. A place of entrance, such as a door or gate.
Spatial relations are the placement of things in the space they occupy. The positioning apart of the hands of a clock, the placing of a footstool adjacent to an easy chair, or a doormat outside a door are examples of spatial relations.
The meaning for "to clock in" goes back about a century when an actual clock with a time stamp or punch was used to mark a time card for employees. The card would show the clock's stamp of when an employee arrived, went to and returned from lunch, and when they went home at the end of the day. The term is commonly used today in most English speaking countries, and the way to "clock in" is still very similar, if not exactly the same, as when it began. Although much of the clocking in is done by computer now and is much harder to falsify than the old stamp method when a friend could clock you in when he clocked in himself. +++ As one who had to use the system in a factory in the 1980s (last century!) I can also say the clock could be used to time the work itself as well as your presence in the building. In our case, a batch-production machine-shop, each machinist had his own attendance-card, but also collected a similar card for each task, write the Job Number on it and clock on and off the task. In this way the accounts department could calculate the labour-charge elements of the products' selling-costs. ' I work now for a company using flexi-time, which obviously places all staff on trust, but in theory anyone could be tracked via a computer record generated by the door security system in which employee has a coded, magnetic fob like a USB stick, plus PIN, to unlock the door.
A 100 cm door makes sense. A doorway with hinges on the side needs to be large enough to allow people and things to pass but not so big that it gets difficult to open and close. To manipulate a much wider door may require separating the door into sections with hanging supports or wheels positioned underneath or being opened by lifting as in typical garage doors. A 100 meter doorway might be appropriate for an aircraft hanger
The entrance to a building is a door.
I believe it is called a frieze. Look up the word for the definition.
form_title= Front Entrance Door form_header= Have a great welcome home with a new entrance door. What color do you want the door?*= _ [50] Are you replacing an old door?*= () Yes () No Do you want to include a deadbolt?*= () Yes () No
The front entrance inside a home is the "foyer". In the UK we call it a door, front door, back door, patio door etc.
Revolving door.
Entrance or exit
a door?
Also known as back-door entrance.
"store door"
foris -is , f. [a door]; plur. fores, [folding-doors]. Transf., [any opening, entrance].ianua -ae f. [door; entrance , approach].ostium -i n. [door]; in gen. [entrance]; 'fluminis' , [mouth].
entrance to somthing
Revolving door.