window above a door...look up 'transom'
Skylight, fanlight, transom, porthole
window above a door...look up 'transom'
balance it
Pillars Hipped roof Fanlight Sash windows Roof Balustrade
transom is a bean a window over a door is called a fanlight A Transom IS indeed a window over a door
Well, there are many names for the guillotine that decapitates many people. These are some of the many nicknamDuring The Revolution: L'abbaye de monte-à-regret : (The Abbey of the Reluctant Climb),Le Rasoir national : (The national Razor),Le Vasistas : (The fanlight),La Veuve :(The Widow),Louisette or Louison : (from the name of the inventor Antoine Louis),Madame La Guillotine : (Mrs. Guillotine)Mirabelle: (from the name of Mirabeau),In The 19th Century:La Lucarne: (another name for fanlight).In The 20th Century:La Bécane: (a slang word for the machine or the motorcycle,Le Massicot: (technical word for the guillotine in printing works)
Using the remote is like having two switches in series. Both switches have to be on at the same time. Do not use the remote to turn off the fan when you want to turn the fan off with the wall switch.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern F-NL----. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter F and 3rd letter N and 4th letter L. In alphabetical order, they are: fanlight fenlands
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 2 words with the pattern FAN-IG--. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter F and 2nd letter A and 3rd letter N and 5th letter I and 6th letter G. In alphabetical order, they are: fanlight fantigue
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern F-N-IGH-. That is, eight letter words with 1st letter F and 3rd letter N and 5th letter I and 6th letter G and 7th letter H. In alphabetical order, they are: fanlight
I'm pretty sure. The porch of tara was actual brick columns and brick steps...the house was a typical Hollywood paper mache aplique. The door and windows were real. The set was dismantled, removing the paper mache portions along with the doors and windows; boxed and sold to a man who stored them in a North Georgia barn. This was later sold to Betty Talmadge, collector of GWTW properties including Lovejoy Plantation that Margaret Mitchell based "Twelve Oaks" on. Her son still owns them and has lent the front entry door and fanlight to the Georgia history where it is on exhibit. The other parts, I assume, are at the Lovejoy Plantation. I think in the "Big Valley, they reconstucted the windows and doors of the house and added a fifth column (after the doors and windows were removed). I visited the stuio where this was "suppose" to exist about twenty-five years ago and they told me that it had been replaced by a parking lot. Then, several years later I saw the same structure used as Blanche deVereau's house, "Twin Oaks" in the Golden Girls episode where Big Daddy dies. It was a recent shot (in the 80's) years after I was told it was gone, so I figure that the bones are still in tact somewhere on Metro's back lot.
It's got a big black door with white numbers.The following information is taken from Wikipedia.Number 10's famous door is the product of the renovations Townsend ordered in 1766; it was probably not completed until 1772. Executed in the Georgian style by the architect kenton-couse, it is unassuming and narrow, consisting of a single white stone step leading to a modest brick front. The small, six-panelled door, originally made of black oak, is surrounded by cream-coloured casing and adorned with a semicircular fanlight-2window. Painted in white, between the top and middle sets of panels, is the number "10". The zero of the number "10" is set at a slight angle as a nod to the original number which had a badly fixed zero. A black iron door-knockerin the shape of a lion's head is between the two middle panels; below the knocker is a brass letter-box-1with the inscription "First Lord of the Treasury". A black ironwork fence with spiked newelposts runs along the front of the house and up each side of the step to the door. The fence rises above the step into a double-swirled archway, supporting an iron gas-lightingsurmounted by a crown.