architecture


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ar·chi·tec·ture

 (är′kĭ-tĕk′chər)
n.
1. The art and science of designing and erecting buildings.
2. Buildings and other large structures: the low, brick-and-adobe architecture of the Southwest.
3. A style and method of design and construction: Byzantine architecture.
4. Orderly arrangement of parts; structure: the architecture of the federal bureaucracy; the architecture of a novel.
5. Computers The overall design or structure of a computer system or microprocessor, including the hardware or software required to run it.
6. Any of various disciplines concerned with the design or organization of complex systems: enterprise architecture.

[Latin architectūra, from architectus, architect; see architect.]

ar′chi·tec′tur·al adj.
ar′chi·tec′tur·al·ly adv.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

architecture

(ˈɑːkɪˌtɛktʃə)
n
1. (Architecture) the art and science of designing and superintending the erection of buildings and similar structures
2. (Architecture) a style of building or structure: Gothic architecture.
3. (Architecture) buildings or structures collectively
4. the structure or design of anything: the architecture of the universe.
5. (Computer Science) the internal organization of a computer's components with particular reference to the way in which data is transmitted
6. (Computer Science) the arrangement of the various devices in a complete computer system or network
ˌarchiˈtectural adj
ˌarchiˈtecturally adv
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

ar•chi•tec•ture

(ˈɑr kɪˌtɛk tʃər)

n.
1. the profession of designing buildings, open areas, communities, and other artificial constructions and environments.
2. the character or style of building: Romanesque architecture.
3. the action or process of building; construction.
4. the result or product of architectural work.
5. buildings collectively.
6. the structure of something: the architecture of a novel.
7. a fundamental underlying design of computer hardware, software, or both.
[1555–65; (< Middle French) < Latin architectūra. See architect, -ure]
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

architecture

A framework or structure that portrays relationships among all the elements of the subject force, system, or activity.
Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. US Department of Defense 2005.

Architecture

See also buildings; houses

a citadel or elevated fortification of a settlement.
the science of architecture. See also art; philosophy. — architectonic, architectonical, adj.
a style of architecture distinguished by excessive ornamentation or floridity. — Asiatical, adj.
a highly decorated form of art or ornamentation. — baroque, adj.
an aggressive 20th-century style, usually in rough-textured and unfinished materials, that frankly exhibits both structural and mechanical systems.
a 20th-century style dwelling, usually of one story, imitative of the true bungalow form characterized by low, sweeping roof gables and a large verandah in the front.
1. the employment of compositional formulas and decorative techniques based upon the architecture of ancient Greece or Rome, but often including new ideas.
2. the employment of formulas and decorative techniques with an emphasis upon the subordination of utility in order to stress perfection of form.
1. the use of columns in architectural design.
2. the pattern of columns used.
a form of ornamentation composed of cusps or curves meeting in pairs at a tangent to the area being decorated. — cuspidate, cuspidal, adj.
an international movement, most in vogue from 1820 until about 1930, characterized by almost total freedom of choice among historical styles of both overall composition and decoration in the design of public buildings, the freedom tempered by the intended use or location of the building.
a style imitative of antique Egyptian temple architecture, most influential after Napoleon’s campaign in Egypt and lasting in the U.S. into the early 20th century.
the slight convexity or outward curve given to a tower or other tall, narrow structure.
harmonious proportions in a building.
an American style based upon the classical theories and decorations of the English architect Robert Adams and his contemporaries, with lightness and delicacy as its outstanding qualities; practiced from 1775 until overwhelmed by Greek Revivalism, its most typical external features are doorways with fanlights and sidelights (often with attenuated pilasters) and the play of other curved elements against a basically boxlike structure. Also called Early Federal Style, Early Republican.
a philosophy of architectural design rather than a separate style, expressed in Louis Sullivan’s “form follows function” and Le Corbu-sier’s concept of a house as a machine for living in, under the premise that buildings ought to express construction, materials, and accommodation of purpose, usually with the assumption that the result would be aesthetically significant. Also called structuralism. — functionalist, n., adj.
1. in England, the modes of architecture, furniture, decoration, and silver produced from about 1714 to 1830; architecturally, it embraced several styles: Palladian, Early Gothic Revival, Chinese, and various other classical and romantic manners.
2. in America, the architectural style of the English colonies during the 18th century, based first upon the ideas of Christopher Wren and James Gibbs and later upon the Palladian style. It is typically characterized by construction in red brick with white or colored trim and double-hung windows, central halls, elaborately turned stair balusters, paneled and warmly colored walls, fine woodwork, and white plastered ceilings.
a universal style current since its inception in Britain in the late 18th century, passing from a period of superficial decoration to one in which true Gothic massing yielded such masterpieces as the British Houses of Parliament and Pittsburgh’s Cathedral of Learning.
the general term employed to denote the several phases of European architecture in the period 1100-1530 that employ the pointed arch, or their imitations.
an austere American style of the period 1798-1850, embracing in either form or decoration such Greek features as bilateral symmetry, low-pitched roofs, frontal porticos with pediments, and horizontal doorheads; often executed in wood and painted white, the structures usually featured modifications of the classical orders and occasional imaginative use of interior vaulting.
the space between columns; the pattern of spacing between columns.
a style, current since the 1920s, that makes use of modern constructional advances to create buildings reflecting characteristic industrial forms and emphasizing both volume and horizontality through ribbon windows, smooth and undecorated wall surfaces, and flat roofs, with contrasts introduced by curved or cylindrical forms and cantilevered projecting features.
a current style emphasizing dynamism achieved by employment of sweeping curves, acute angles, and pointed arches.
a current American manner, characterized by buildings that are freestanding blocks with symmetrical elevation, level rooflines (often with heavy, projecting roof slabs), many modeled columnar supports, and frequent use of the arch as a ruling motif to produce a kind of classicism without classical forms.
the classical style evolved by the 16th-century architect Andrea Palladio, featuring harmonic proportion based upon mathematics, extensive use of porticos, a neat contrast between openness and solidity, and features of Roman decoration; partially influential today in the so-called “Palladian motif,” a window or other opening consisting of a central high arch flanked by lower rectangular areas, the whole supported by four columns (a feature actually invented before Palladio’s time and used only sparingly by him).
a style originating in England c.1830 and influential in the U.S. from 1850 through 1930, derived from the Renaissance palace architecture of Rome, Florence, and Venice; in the U.S., the structures were executed in masonry, wood, or cast iron.
functionalism.
a general term for the theory and techniques of construction. — tectonist, n.tectonic, adj.
-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:
Noun1.architecture - an architectural product or workarchitecture - an architectural product or work  
building, edifice - a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place; "there was a three-story building on the corner"; "it was an imposing edifice"
architecture - the discipline dealing with the principles of design and construction and ornamentation of fine buildings; "architecture and eloquence are mixed arts whose end is sometimes beauty and sometimes use"
2.architecture - the discipline dealing with the principles of design and construction and ornamentation of fine buildings; "architecture and eloquence are mixed arts whose end is sometimes beauty and sometimes use"
arch - (architecture) a masonry construction (usually curved) for spanning an opening and supporting the weight above it
architectural ornament - (architecture) something added to a building to improve its appearance
architecture - an architectural product or work
attic - (architecture) a low wall at the top of the entablature; hides the roof
pillar, column - (architecture) a tall vertical cylindrical structure standing upright and used to support a structure
conge, congee - (architecture) a concave molding
corbel, truss - (architecture) a triangular bracket of brick or stone (usually of slight extent)
corbel arch - (architecture) an arch constructed of masonry courses that are corbelled until they meet
corbel step, corbiestep, corbie-step, crow step - (architecture) a step on the top of a gable wall
corbie gable - (architecture) a gable having corbie-steps or corbel steps
quoin, corner - (architecture) solid exterior angle of a building; especially one formed by a cornerstone
drip mold, drip mould, drip - (architecture) a projection from a cornice or sill designed to protect the area below from rainwater (as over a window or doorway)
entablature - (architecture) the structure consisting of the part of a classical temple above the columns between a capital and the roof
foliage, foliation - (architecture) leaf-like architectural ornament
modillion - (architecture) one of a set of ornamental brackets under a cornice
pier - (architecture) a vertical supporting structure (as a portion of wall between two doors or windows)
pinnacle - (architecture) a slender upright spire at the top of a buttress of tower
scape, shaft - (architecture) upright consisting of the vertical part of a column
spandrel, spandril - an approximately triangular surface area between two adjacent arches and the horizontal plane above them
terminal figure, terminus, term - (architecture) a statue or a human bust or an animal carved out of the top of a square pillar; originally used as a boundary marker in ancient Rome
vaulting - (architecture) a vaulted structure; "arches and vaulting"
order - (architecture) one of original three styles of Greek architecture distinguished by the type of column and entablature used or a style developed from the original three by the Romans
columniation - (architecture) the arrangement of columns (especially freestanding columns) in a structure
fenestration - the arrangement of windows in a building
art form - (architecture) a form of artistic expression (such as writing or painting or architecture)
discipline, field of study, subject area, subject field, bailiwick, subject, field, study - a branch of knowledge; "in what discipline is his doctorate?"; "teachers should be well trained in their subject"; "anthropology is the study of human beings"
architectonics, tectonics - the science of architecture
landscape architecture - the branch of architecture dealing with the arrangement of land and buildings for human use and enjoyment
urban planning - the branch of architecture dealing with the design and organization of urban space and activities
interior design - the branch of architecture dealing with the selection and organization of furnishings for an architectural interior
beaux arts, fine arts - the study and creation of visual works of art
hip - (architecture) the exterior angle formed by the junction of a sloping side and a sloping end of a roof
build - be engaged in building; "These architects build in interesting and new styles"
corbel - furnish with a corbel
cornice - furnish with a cornice
attached - used of buildings joined by common sidewalls; "a block of attached houses"
detached - used of buildings; standing apart from others; "detached houses"; "a detached garage"
foliate, foliated - ornamented with foliage or foils; "foliate tracery"; "a foliated capital"
3.architecture - the profession of designing buildings and environments with consideration for their esthetic effectarchitecture - the profession of designing buildings and environments with consideration for their esthetic effect
profession - an occupation requiring special education (especially in the liberal arts or sciences)
cantilever - construct with girders and beams such that only one end is fixed; "Frank Lloyd Wright liked to cantilever his buildings"
terrace, terrasse - provide (a house) with a terrace; "We terrassed the country house"
step - furnish with steps; "The architect wants to step the terrace"
rail - provide with rails; "The yard was railed"
air-cool, air-condition - equip with an apparatus for controlling the humidity and temperature; "Our house is not air-conditioned"
seat - provide with seats; "seat a concert hall"
reseat - provide with new seats; "reseat Carnegie Hall"
ramp - furnish with a ramp; "The ramped auditorium"
crenel, crenelate, crenellate - supply with battlements
rafter - provide (a ceiling) with rafters
gate - supply with a gate; "The house was gated"
machicolate - supply with projecting galleries; "machicolate the castle walls"
sanitate - provide with sanitary facilities or appliances
4.architecture - (computer science) the structure and organization of a computer's hardware or system software; "the architecture of a computer's system software"
structure - the manner of construction of something and the arrangement of its parts; "artists must study the structure of the human body"; "the structure of the benzene molecule"
complex instruction set computer, complex instruction set computing, CISC - (computer science) a kind of computer architecture that has a large number of instructions hard coded into the CPU chip
reduced instruction set computer, reduced instruction set computing, RISC - (computer science) a kind of computer architecture that has a relatively small set of computer instructions that it can perform
computer science, computing - the branch of engineering science that studies (with the aid of computers) computable processes and structures
Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

architecture

noun
1. design, planning, building, construction, architectonics He studied architecture and design at college.
2. construction, design, style a fine example of Moroccan architecture
3. structure, design, shape, make-up, construction, framework, layout, anatomy the architecture of muscle fibres see types of arch
Quotations
"Architecture in general is frozen music" [Friedrich von Schelling Philosophie der Kunst]
"Architecture is the art of how to waste space" [Philip Johnson New York Times]
"Architecture, of all the arts, is the one which acts the most slowly, but the most surely, on the soul" [Ernest Dimnet What We Live By]

Architecture

Architectural styles  Art Deco, Art Nouveau, Baroque, Bauhaus, brutalist, Byzantine, churrigueresque or churrigueresco, classical, colonial, Composite, Corinthian, Decorated, Doric, Early Christian, Early English, Edwardian, Elizabethan, Empire, Federation (Austral.), functionalism, Georgian, Gothic, Gothic Revival, Greek Revival, International Style or Modernist, Ionic, Jacobean, Louis Quatorze, Louis Quinze, Louis Seize, Louis Treize, Mannerist, moderne, Moorish or Morisco, Mudéjar, neoclassicist, new brutalist, Norman, Palladian, perpendicular, postmodernist, Queen-Anne, Regency, Renaissance, Rococo, Roman, Romanesque, Saracen, Saxon, transition or transitional, Tudor, Tuscan, Victorian
Architectural terms  abutment or abuttal, architectonic, architectonics, architectural, astylar, bolster, bracket, castellated or castled, cinquecento, cloistered, colossal or giant, composite, cradling, crenellate or (U.S.) crenelate, denticulate, diastyle, diminish, dipteral, discharge, drum, elevation, engaged, eurhythmy, fenestrated, filler, flamboyant, floor plan, floriated or floreated, florid, fluted, foliated, foliation, galilee, galleria, ground plan, hexastyle, high-pitched, hip, hipped, hypostyle, imbricate or imbricated, intercolumniation, invert, joggle post or king post, lanceted, lierne, lintel or summer, listed, loggia, member, module, Moresque, naos, order, orientation, polychromy, postiche, profile, prostyle, pulvinate or pulvinated, queen post, rampant, rendering, respond, return, rhythm, ribbon development, rise, rusticate, sexpartite, shaft, shafting, shell, soffit, springing, spring, springing line, or springing point, stilted, storey, stria, stringer, string, or string course, stylobate, subbase, summer or summer tree, supercolumnar, surbase, tailpiece or tail beam, trabeate or trabeated, tympanic, underpitch vault
Architectural features  abacus, acanthus, accolade, acroter, aisle, ambulatory, amphiprostyle, amphistylar, ancon or ancone, annulet, anta, antefix, anthemion, apophyge or hypophyge, apse or apsis, apteral, arcade, arcature, arch, architrave, archivolt, arcuation, arris, articulation, astragal, atlas (plural atlantes) or telamon, atrium, attic, baguette or baguet, balcony, baldachin, balk, ballflower, baluster, band, banderole, banderol, or bannerol, barge couple, barge course, barrel vault, tunnel vault, or wagon vault, base, basement, bay window, bead, beak, bed moulding, belfry, bezant, bezzant, or byzant, billet, binder, bolection or bilection, bottom house, bow, bow window, bracket, brattishing, breast, broach, buttress, caisson, coffer, or lacuna, calotte, canopy, cantilever, capital, chapiter, or cap, cartouche, caryatid, case or casing, casement, Catherine wheel, cavetto, ceiling, cella or naos, cellar, channel, chaplet, cheek, chevron or dancette, choir, choir loft, cinquefoil, clerestory, cloister, colonnade, columbarium, column, columniation, compass window, concha or conch, congé, corbeil or corbeille, corbel or truss, corbie gable, corbie-step, corbel step, or crow step, cordon, string course, belt course, or table, cornice, corona, cove or coving, crenel or crenelle, cresting, crocket or crochet, crossing, crown, cullis, cupola, curb roof, curtail step, curtain wall, cushion, cusp, cuspidation, cyma, cymatium, dado, decastyle, dentil, die, dogtooth, drip, dripstone, label, or hood mould, echinus, ectype, egg and dart, egg and tongue, or egg and anchor, ell, embrasure, entablature, entasis, exedra, extrados, facade, facet, fan, fanlight, fantail, fan tracery, fan or palm vaulting, fascia or facia, fascial or facial, fenestella, fenestra, festoon, fillet or listel, finial, flèche, fluting, flying buttress or arc-boutant, foil, footing, footstall, French windows or doors, frieze, frontispiece, frustum, gable, gable end, gable window, gadroon or godroon, gallery, gambrel, gargoyle, garret, garth, gatehouse, gazebo, glyph, gradin, griffe, groin, grotto, gutta, half landing, haunch or hance, headstone, headwork, helicline, hipped or hip roof, imperial, impost, intrados, jube, keystone, quoin, or headstone, lancet arch, Gothic arch, or ogive, lancet window, landing, lantern, leaded, loggia, long-and-short work, louvre, lucarne, machicolation, mansard, meander, medallion, metope, minaret, modillion, moulding, mullion, mutule, narthex, neck, necking or gorgerin, newel, niche, Norman arch or Roman arch, obelisk, oeil-de-boeuf, offset, ogee, ogee arch, or talon, ogive, onion dome, oriel or oriel window, ovolo, quarter round, or thumb, pace, parapet, patio, pedestal, pediment, pendant, penthouse, peristyle, perpend, perron, piazza, pier, pillar, pinnacle, platform, plinth, podium, predella, pylon, quad, poppyhead, porch or portico, portal, porte-cochere, postern, propylaeum, quadrangle, quatrefoil, quirk, quoin, coign, or coigne, reed, reeding, reglet, relief, respond, return, reveal, rib, ridge, rose window, rosace, or rosette, rotunda, roundel, saddle roof or saddleback, sash window, scotia, screen, scrollwork, semidome, shaft, shafting, sill, skew arch, skylight, soffit, spandrel or spandril, spire, splay, springer, squinch, squint or hagioscope, steeple, stele or stela, stoa, straining piece, strap work, stria, strigil, stylobate or stereobate, summer, taenia or (U.S.) tenia, tambour, tellamon, term, terminal, or terminus, torus or tore, tracery, transept, traverse, trefoil, tribune, triforium, triglyph, trophy, trumeau, turret, tympanum or tympan, underpitch vault, vault, veranda or verandah, verge, vignette, volute or helix, water table, web, whispering gallery, xyst
Architects  Alvar Aalto (Finnish), (Leslie) Patrick Abercrombie (English), James Adam (Scottish), Robert Adam (Scottish), William Adam (Scottish), Leon Battista Alberti (Italian), Anthemias of Tralles (Greek), Arnolfo di Cambio (Italian), Erik Gunnar Asplund (Swedish), Herbert Baker (English), Charles Barry (English), Frédéric August Bartholdi (French), Peter Behrens (German), Hendrick Petrus Berlage (Dutch), Gian Lorenzo Bernini (Italian), Francesco Borromini (Italian), Etienne-Louis Boulle (French), Donato Bramante (Italian), Marcel Lajos Breuer (Hungarian-U.S.), Salomon de Brosse (French), Filippo Brunelleschi (Italian), David Bryce (Scottish), David Hudson Burnham (U.S.), Decimus Burton (English), William Butterfield (English), Callicrates (Greek), Jacob van Campen (Dutch), Felix Candela (Mexican), Hugh (Maxwell) Casson (English), William Chambers (Scottish), Serge Chermayeff (U.S.), Don Jose Churriguera (Spanish), Wells Wintemute Coates (English), Charles Robert Cockerell (English), Pietro Berrettini da Cortona (Italian), Francois de Cuvillies (Bavarian), Daedalus (Greek), George Dance (the Elder) (English), George Dance (the Younger) (English), Philibert Delorme or de l'Orme (French), Theo van Doesburg (Dutch), Balkrishna Vithaldas Doshi (Indian), Willem Marinus Dudok (Dutch), Johann Carl Ludwig Engel (Finnish), Arthur Charles Erickson (Canadian), Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach (Austrian), Norman Foster (English), (Richard) Buckminster Fuller (U.S.), Ange-Jacques Gabriel (French), Tony (Antoine) Garnier (French), Antonio Gaudí (Spanish), Patrick Geddes (Scottish), Frederick Gibberd (English), James Gibbs (English), Cass Gilbert (U.S.), Friedrich Gilly (German), Francesco di Giorgio (Italian), Giotto (di Bondone) (Italian), Giulio Romano (Italian), Walter Gropius (German), Guarino Guarini (Italian), Thomas Hamilton (Scottish), Georges Eugene Haussmann (French), Nicholas Hawksmoor (English), Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt (Austrian), Josef Hoffmann (Austrian), Henry Holland (English), Victor Horta (Belgian), Ebenezer Howard (English), Ictinus (Greek), Imhotep (Egyptian), Arne Jacobsen (Danish), Philip Cortelyou Johnson (U.S.), Inigo Jones (English), Louis I(sadore) Kahn (U.S.), William Kent (English), (Pierre Francois) Henri Labrouste (French), Denys Lasdun (English), Le Corbusier (French), Claude Nicolas Ledoux (French), Leonardo da Vinci (Italian), Pierre Lescot (French), William Richard Lethaby (English), Louis Levau (French), Adolf Loos (Austrian), Robert Stodart Lorimer (Scottish), Edwin Lutyens (English), Charles Rennie Mackintosh (Scottish), Arthur Heygate Mackmurdo (English), Carlo Maderna or Maderno (Italian), François Mansart (French), Jules Hardouin Mansart (French), Eric Mendelsohn (German), Michelangelo (Italian), Michelozzo (Italian), Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (German-U.S.), Charles Willard Moore (U.S.), John Nash (English), Pier Luigi Nervi (Italian), Johann Balthasar Neumann (German), Oscar Niemeyer (Brazilian), Andrea Orcagna (Italian), Jacobus Johann Pieter Oud (Dutch), Andrea Palladio (Italian), Joseph Paxton (English), I(eoh) M(ing) Pei (Chinese-U.S.), Auguste Perret (French), Baldassare Tommaso Peruzzi (Italian), Pietro da Cortona (Italian), Giambattista Piranesi (Italian), Andrea Pisano (Italian), Nicola Pisano (Italian), William Henry Playfair (Scottish), Hans Poelzig (German), Augustus (Welby Northmore) Pugin (English), Raphael (Italian), James Renwick (U.S.), Gerrit Thomas Rietveld (Dutch), Richard Rogers (English), Eero Saarinen (Finnish-U.S.), Michele Sanmicheli (Italian), Jacopo Sansovino (Italian), Karl Friederich Schinkel (German), Scopas (Greek), George Gilbert Scott (English), Giles Gilbert Scott (English), Sebastiano Serlio (Italian), Richard Norman Shaw (English), Robert Smirke (English), Robert Smythson (English), John Soane (English), Ettore Sottsass Jr (Italian), Jacques Germain Soufflot (French), Basil (Unwin) Spence (Scottish), James Stirling (Scottish), George Edmund Street (English), James Stuart (English), Louis (Henri) Sullivan (U.S.), Kenzo Tange (Japanese), (John) Quinlan Terry (English), Alexander (Greek) Thomson (Scottish), Jorn Utzon (Danish), John Vanbrugh (English), Henry van de Velde (Belgian), Giorgio Vasari (Italian), Robert Venturi (U.S.), Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola (Italian), Eugène Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc (French), Marcus Vitruvius Pollio (Roman), Charles (Francis Annesley) Voysey (English), Otto Wagner (Austrian), Alfred Waterhouse (English), Aston Webb (English), Philip Webb (English), John Wood (the Elder) (English), John Wood (the Younger) (English), Christopher Wren (English), Frank Lloyd Wright (U.S.), James Wyatt (English), Minoru Yamasaki (U.S.)
Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002
Translations
عمارةفَن العَمارَه، هَنْدَسَة البِناءفَنُّ العِمَارَة
архитектура
architektura
arkitektur
arĥitekturoarkitekturo
معمار
arkkitehtuuri
arhitektura
építészet
arkitektúr, byggingarlist
建築様式
건축
architectura
architektúra
arhitektura
arkitektur
สถาปัตยกรรม
kiến trúc

architecture

[ˈɑːkɪtektʃəʳ] Narquitectura f
Collins Spanish Dictionary - Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

architecture

[ˈɑːrkɪtɛktʃər] n
(= building design) → architecture f
(as subject of study)architecture f
(= building) → architecture f
Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

architecture

nArchitektur f (also Comput); (of building also)Baustil m
Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

architecture

[ˈɑːkɪˌtɛktʃəʳ] narchitettura
Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

architect

(ˈaːkitekt) noun
a person who designs buildings etc.
ˈarchitecture (-tʃə) noun
the art of designing buildings. He's studying architecture; modern architecture.
ˌarchiˈtectural adjective
Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

architecture

فَنُّ العِمَارَة architektura arkitektur Architektur αρχιτεκτονική arquitectura arkkitehtuuri architecture arhitektura architettura 建築様式 건축 architectuur arkitektur architektura arquitetura архитектура arkitektur สถาปัตยกรรม mimarlık kiến trúc 建筑学
Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009
References in classic literature ?
When I last saw this interesting ruin of ancient days, one of the very few remaining examples of Saxon fortification, I was strongly impressed with the desire of tracing out a sort of theory on the subject, which, from some recent acquaintance with the architecture of the ancient Scandinavians, seemed to me peculiarly interesting.
It consisted of some fifty buildings, including those of every description, chiefly built of wood, and which, in their architecture, bore no great marks of taste, but which also, by the unfinished appearance of most of the dwellings, indicated the hasty manner of their construction, To the eye, they presented a variety of colors.
What does architecture amount to in the experience of the mass of men?
When the visitor has mounted the crumbling steps of this ancient donjon, he reaches a little plateau where, in the seventeenth century, Georges Philibert de Sequigny, Lord of the Glandier, Maisons-Neuves and other places, built the existing town in an abominably rococo style of architecture.
[107] PERHAPS no age of literature, certainly no age of literature in England, has been so rich as ours in excellent secondary poetry; and it is with our poetry (in a measure) as with our architecture, constrained by the nature of the case to be imitative.
Sophia must surely get them out of the guide-book (where every church is spoken of as being "considered by good judges to be the most marvelous structure, in many respects, that the world has ever seen.") Or else they are those old connoisseurs from the wilds of New Jersey who laboriously learn the difference between a fresco and a fire-plug and from that day forward feel privileged to void their critical bathos on painting, sculpture and architecture forever more.
Hence we accept it and we adopt it, like all the rest of the world, to characterize the architecture of the second half of the Middle Ages, where the ogive is the principle which succeeds the architecture of the first period, of which the semi-circle is the father.
I accompanied Sola and Dejah Thoris in a search for new quarters, which we found in a building nearer the audience chamber and of far more pretentious architecture than our former habitation.
With us, our Priests are Administrators of all Business, Art, and Science; Directors of Trade, Commerce, Generalship, Architecture, Engineering, Education, Statesmanship, Legislature, Morality, Theology; doing nothing themselves, they are the Causes of everything worth doing, that is done by others.
The family home was a few miles from Nashville, Tennessee, a large, irregularly built dwelling of no particular order of architecture, a little way off the road, in a park of trees and shrubbery.
There was an air of grandeur in it that struck you with awe, and rivalled the beauties of the best Grecian architecture; and it was as commodious within as venerable without.
It falls naturally into two parts, the first of about twenty years, when he was concerned almost altogether with Art, chiefly Painting and Architecture; and the second somewhat longer, when he was intensely absorbed in the problems of society and strenuously working as a social reformer.

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