exterior ground preped and permenently covered in a secure manner using almost any material: concrete, asphalt, coblestone, flagstone, brick, patio stone, paving stone, even wood (cordaroy log roads not decking) peastone and tar. gravel roads are not paved because the surface is not secure, it is loose. verb the act of intsallation in the past tense also used as a metaphor, to make a task easier " my good resume paved the way to finding a job"
The paved shoulder along a street where people walk.
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Atrium.
The word paved does not include a prefix. You could add one, depending on what you were stating. For example, un- or re-.
The word street is a noun. It is a paved part of a road.
The word street is a noun. It is a paved part of a road.
Proto-Indo-European, "stre-to-". Pleas see the related link below:
Patio is Spanish, it means back garden or backyard. Or usually paved outdoor area adjoining a residence.
Estrada means a road or a paved road in Portugal
Some were, some weren't big cities often had paved roads, while smaller towns mostly didn't. What they considered "paved" back then would often mean cobblestone, not cement or concrete. There were even brick roads.
A place where one may find one's fortune.
terracing is what farmers use if the hills are really steep