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a corner
A ladder leaning against a wall. The slated part of the roof of a house.
Usually, a load bearing wall will be perpendicular to the roof ridge.
All exterior walls in a home are load bearing. The exterior walls on the gable end of your house do not bear much load, but the walls that the hip of the roof bear on carry your roof and ceiling joints. Interior walls are another story. Usually in a smaller one story home there is a wall that runs the midspan of the house that is load bearing for your roof and ceiling joints.
the wall
A roof with two distinct slopes. Usually the upper part of the roof has a shallow pitch (slope) and the part near the wall is steep. A roof with two distinct slopes. Usually the upper part of the roof has a shallow pitch (slope) and the part near the wall is steep.
It may be called a 'parapet' or a 'pony wall'
I guess if its a terrace roof, you call it a parapet.
eaves
It may be called a 'parapet' or a 'pony wall'
A gable is a roof form where two oppositely sloping roof planes meet at a ridge, and the wall below and at right angles to both these roofs continues up to the ridgeline, forming a triangle of wall between the two roof slopes.
A wall on top of a roof that forms an empty space behind it. From the front it will appear to be tall, but from behind the flat part of the roof will be several feet below the top of the wall.
Eaves is the part of a buildings roof that overhangs the exterior wall.
gable end??
a corner
Typically, it is the part that extends beyond the building wall, aka tail of the rafter. It creates the area where you can stand under the edge of the roof when it rains.
A ladder leaning against a wall. The slated part of the roof of a house.