Assuming that you are talking about the gateway arch in St Louis, MO There are 16 windows on each side of the viewing area. Each window is 7 x 27 inches http://www.nps.gov/jeff/planyourvisit/arch-faq.htm
An arch that is pointed at the top. Think 'gothic windows'
The top of the arch. Where the people look out the windows
buttresses
You can't (wheel arch is in the way)
hey wutz up who am i talkin 2 right now or am i talkin 2 my self
I personally use Windows XP at work, Windows 7 on my desktop, and Windows 8 on my laptop. My primary operating system, however, is Linux. On my desktop I'll run Debian Testing 95% of the time with Windows maybe 5%. My laptop runs on Arch.
The "bullet" shape is called a Gothic arch. It is the evolution of the Romanesque arch which is just a semicircle, and has a number of structural advantages.
there are not very many you go up to then top in an elevator that is shaped like a pod
Windows releases are named by the year they were released up until Windows XP where the enterprise and home-use branches merged, then it was Windows Vista, 7, 8, 8.1, and 10. Linux distributions, there are many as they are not developed by a single entity, though some may be based on another. Examples include Debian, Ubuntu (based on Debian), Fedora, Arch, Gentoo, and so on.
Well, there's the arch itself, which is fairly impressive. Underneath the arch (that is, underground) is a small museum, and you can ride a sort of elevator up to the top of the arch in good weather. The top of the arch has small windows that let you look out on downtown St. Louis and across the river into Illinois. I wouldn't recommend it if you are either claustrophobic or afraid of heights.
Marble Arch is a monument located in west London. There are many hotels located in that area. These include The Montcalm London, The Sumner, The Marble Arch by Montcalm, and The Arch London.
13 men built the arch in the mid 1960's 13 men built the st Louis arch