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Discover LudwigThe phrase 'pagoda making' is not correct and usable in written English.
Instead, you could use the phrase 'building pagodas' in a sentence such as: "The art of pagoda making is a long-standing tradition in parts of Asia."
Exact(1)
Two men in Hnin Se's group opened the sacks of rice and poured their contents onto a sheltered walkway outside the pagoda, making a great white mound.
Similar(59)
With its slanted tiers of black wood, it looks like a pagoda made of dark chocolate.
A table that provides another outdoor dining option sits under a pagoda made of six intertwined palm trees.
Eventually he finds a photograph of an elaborate Buddhist pagoda, made from wood and about a metre tall, with arched roofs and ornate, hand-carved shrines.
A big tower in the form of an inverted pagoda makes an impressive silhouette on the skyline, but as we drive closer it appears to be the result of almost medieval building techniques, hastily poured concrete spilling from its shuttering and walls not quite lining up with the floors below.
Even pagodas made of stone or brick featured architectural elements that were typical of Chinese wooden buildings; for example the Pizhi Pagoda, built from 1056 to 1063, uses the dougong brackets typical of wooden architecture to hold up pent, shingled roofs and tiers.
With some persuasion, the family agreed that the grounds of the 6,000-acre 6,000-acreich includestate Foster (friend of the family) pagoda, which make the includesnue notheor a rave, but a pop Fosteral.
The generals seem to have unlimited free time to inspect pagodas and make speeches about the glory of the precolonial past.
At 4 am, when the wake-up bells ring each morning, the tall trees smell like earth and fog creeps around the elegant Burmese-style pagodas and gazebos, making their statues of mythical lions and other creatures look as though they have just emerged from another world.
Making a pagoda is the kind of thing that Andy in the Detectorists would offer to do for his girlfriend Becky (Rachael Stirling), but never get round to.
A slight exaggeration, perhaps, but for some time the pagoda's 10 storeys made it the tallest Chinese-style building in Europe.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com