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the casement
noun
A window sash that is hinged on the side and opens outward.
Exact(42)
The casement windows are probably rusted shut.
"I'm the casement guy," Mr. Brown said.
"The casement windows weren't energy efficient," he said.
Softly she blows the doors of the casement open and re-enters his world.
Someone — someone small — had broken and then crawled through the casement window the night before.
The twin bed and other furnishings were Ikea-basic but the casement windows were triple-glazed.
Similar(18)
Their irregular texture and wide mortar gaps, along with the casement-like black metal mullions of the new windows, make the bookstore appear much older than the storefronts around it.
One of the classes in the casements of the Fort.
Henry M. Flagler, a railroad pioneer and resort promoter, bought and enlarged the Hotel Ormond (1888), and several large estates developed, including John D. Rockefeller's winter home, the Casements (now a city cultural centre).
By the 15th century, however, solid shutters were being replaced by hinged glazed sashes, or casements, which led to the standard use of rectangular openings in all buildings because of the ease with which the casements could be framed in them.
The Casements' railhead was east of Rawlins Springs.
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