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Discover LudwigThe word 'pilings' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to the tall, wooden or concrete posts that are driven into the ground to support a structure, like a pier or a house. For example: "The contractor brought in a team to build the pilings for the new pier."
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Piers and pilings all need to be redone.
Some generate photo-like images of the bottom, including structures such as sunken trees and pilings which are often prime habitat.
(The exterior of the building actually changed very little from Wright's original conception).In this section In praise of mediocrity O'Keeffe eclipses Stieglitz The last explorer's last journey The Wright stuff Shop art Soviet hangover ReprintsEnvironmentalists sued, charging that the building's pilings would cause contaminants from an old landfill to leech into Lake Monona.
Decayed pilings broken off.
Houses in Cambodia were generally built on wooden pilings and had thatched roofs, walls of palm matting, and floors of woven bamboo strips resting on bamboo joists.
The common structural shapes are wide flange I-beams, standard I-beams, channels, angles, tees, zees, H-pilings, and sheet pilings.
Walls were made of tamped earth sandwiched between wooden boards, adobe bricks, a brick and stone mixture, rocks, or pilings and planks.
Colonies of the European Pentapora, however, can reach one metre (3.3 feet) or more in circumference; a warm-water gymnolaemate genus, Zoobotryon, which hangs from harbour pilings, and the freshwater phylactolaemate Pectinatella each produce masses that may be one-half metre across.
There are about a dozen important species of sessile and pedunculate barnacles that foul ships and submerged portions of marine installations, such as pier pilings, oil platforms, floats, buoys, and mooring cables.
Poles are used in supporting telegraph and telephone lines and as pilings (foundations for wharves and buildings); posts are used in fences, highway guards, and various supports.
Periwinkles are widely distributed shore (littoral) snails, chiefly herbivorous, usually found on rocks, stones, or pilings between high- and low-tide marks; a few are found on mud flats, and some tropical forms are found on the prop roots or mangrove trees.
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