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to columns
noun
A solid upright structure designed usually to support a larger structure above it, such as a roof or horizontal beam, but sometimes for decoration.
Exact(58)
Several Polaroids show dancers and performers posing next to columns and on pedestals.
It is written, not engraved, across two neat columns, similar to columns in a Torah.
Pay special attention to columns, which are the key to having a building sway rather than topple.
This time, though, the texts are not confined to columns but wander through the paintings like rivers or mountains.
The company wanted to use as much recycled material as it could, Mr. Durst recalled, but the skeptical contractors limited its use to columns rather than floors.
Not only Christ, but the saints, have often been portrayed tied to columns to be tortured in some of the most harrowing of all paintings.
In 1970, the artist was working with nested geometric forms, crisply ruled and measured, which in 1983 change to columns of spiky lines suggesting EKG graphs.
The performance follows the structure of a magazine, beginning with Mailbag and other short, front-of-the-book items and moving on to columns and feature articles.
The general principle has been extended from filter paper strips to columns of other relatively inert media, permitting larger scale separation and identification of closely related biological substances.
Similar(2)
Ms. Hudson plays Andie Anderson, who writes how-to columns for a glossy women's magazine called Composure.
A writer of how-to columns (Kate Hudson) plans to get a man to fall in love with her and then dump him in 10 days.
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