|
HURDLING |
Vaulting |
|
LEAPFROGGING |
Vaulting |
|
LEAPFROG |
Vaulting game |
|
HORSE |
Vaulting apparatus |
|
|
CAMERATION |
A vaulting or arching over. |
|
ACROBATISM |
Feats of the acrobat; daring gymnastic feats; high
vaulting. |
|
CROSS-VAULTING |
Vaulting formed by the intersection of two or more
simple vaults. |
|
ACROBAT |
One who practices rope dancing, high vaulting, or other
daring gymnastic feats. |
|
|
SPRINGER |
The rib of a groined vault, as being the solid abutment
for each section of vaulting. |
|
TRACER/Y |
A similar decoration in some styles of vaulting, the ribs
of the vault giving off the minor bars of which the tracery is
composed. |
|
LIERNE RIB |
In Gothic vaulting, any rib which does not spring from
the impost and is not a ridge rib, but passes from one boss or
intersection of the principal ribs to another. |
|
CORONA |
A crown or circlet suspended from the roof or vaulting of
churches, to hold tapers lighted on solemn occasions. It is sometimes
formed of doubl... |
|
TRIFORIUM |
The gallery or open space between the vaulting and the
roof of the aisles of a church, often forming a rich arcade in the
interior of the churc... |
|
BAY |
...her part of a
building, or of the whole building, as marked off by the buttresses,
vaulting, mullions of a window, etc.; one of the main divisio... |
|
RIB |
In Gothic vaulting, one of the primary members of the vault.
These are strong arches, meeting and crossing one another, dividing the
whole spac... |