campanile
Peter Hayesm Gloucester UK
campanile Peter Hayesm Gloucester UK
Bell towers
A bell tower in a church is typically referred to as a "campanile." The term "campanile" originates from the Italian word for "bell" (campana) and is commonly used to describe a freestanding tower or structure that houses bells. Campaniles are often a distinctive feature of church architecture and serve both functional and symbolic purposes within the religious context.
look at where you are sitting. Do you like it? Unless you are outside, this place where you are sitting is an "architectural structure". If you are at home then you will notice that this place holds all your belongings and provides you with a shelter in which you live. I really hope you're going to school
"Clochetière" is a French term that typically refers to a bell ringer or the person responsible for ringing a bell, often in a church or clock tower. It can also denote a type of bell used in various cultural contexts. In a broader sense, the term may be associated with roles related to signaling or announcing something, particularly through the use of bells.
architect
The musical term for making each note brief and detached from the rest, commonly used in staccato playing, is called "staccato."
Technically it is just the Clock Tower, it is often mistakenly called St. Stephens Tower, but that is wrong. St. Stephens Tower is at the entrance to the Houses of Parliament. It is actually the biggest and heaviest bell inside the Tower that bears the name 'Big Ben'. It's the Clock Tower of the Palace of Westminster, London, England and is being named the Queen Elizabeth Tower in 2012 in recognition of Her Majesties Diamond Jubilee.
A 'detached' house is not joined to other houses.
anomie
A portico
a colonnade is a linear series of columns.