PAROLE IN INGLESE ASSOCIATE CON «EAVESDRIP»
eavesdrip
rain
gutter
narrow
channel
trough
forming
component
roof
system
which
collects
diverts
rainwater
shed
also
known
eavestrough
eaves
guttering
simply
eavesdrip
wiktionary
edit
noun
plural
eavesdrips
eavesdrop
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from
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index
title=eavesdrip
oldid=
define
listen
secretly
private
conversation
verb
used
with
object
eavesdropped
eavesdropping
archaic
encyclopædia
britannica
wikisource
that
width
ground
around
house
building
receives
water
dropping
area
became
people
would
stand
what
neighbors
were
saying
collins
always
falling
dripping
edges
underneath
where
falls
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10 LIBRI IN INGLESE ASSOCIATI CON «EAVESDRIP»
Scopri l'uso di
eavesdrip nella seguente selezione bibliografica. Libri associati con
eavesdrip e piccoli estratti per contestualizzare il loro uso nella letteratura.
1
the digest of justionian
If a servitude of eavesdrip is created, it is not lawful for the owner of the servient
ground to build on the spot to which the eavesdrip has reached. 4. If the
eavesdrip was originally discharged from the tiles, it cannot afterwards be legally
...
2
the digest of justinian
If a servitude of eavesdrip is created, it is not lawful for the owner of the servient
ground to build on the spot to which the eavesdrip has reached. 4. If the
eavesdrip was originally discharged from the tiles, it cannot afterwards be legally
...
3
The Digest of Justinian
If a building from which eavesdrip was discharged is taken down to be replaced
by a building of the identical type and character, expediency demands that the
latter be regarded as the same building as the one taken down. On the other
hand, ...
4
East Anglian Archaeology
However, it is not quite circular, the eavesdrip and outer post ring being slightly
wider from east to west than north to south, although the inner post ring is circular
. The eavesdrip gully has a diameter of 14m east to west and 13.5m north to ...
5
Anglo Saxon England and the Norman Conquest
At Canterbury houses were being built too close together, and what amounted
virtually to a by-law laid down that there should be a space of two feet clear for
eavesdrip between the houses.107 Both the Kentish cities were partitioned into ...
6
Everything Kids' Spies Puzzle and Activity Book
People who hung around the “eavesdrip” of another person's home were
punished with a fine. The eavesdrip was the area around the house (about 2 feet)
which received jp* the rain falling from the eaves. START Bird'sEye View Can
you ...
7
Youth and Age in the Medieval North
There, where a possible leper was buried to the south of the church positioned
near the so-called 'eavesdrip' burials, close to the south side of the first church,
an area which contained mainly infant inhumations.54 Eavesdrip burials may be
...
Shannon Lewis-Simpson, 2008
8
Feasting the Dead: Food and Drink in Anglo-Saxon Burial Rituals
57 Examples are the burial of a leper among children at the 'eavesdrip' of the
church at the late Anglo- Saxon cemetery of Raunds Furnell, Northamptonshire.
John Blair has recently observed that there seems to be a widespread practice of
...
9
Essex Archaeology and History: The Transactions of the Essex ...
It was much less substantial than the foundation trenches and must be an
eavesdrip gully as it lies outside the line of the building's north-east wall. The
presence of an eavesdrip gully indicates that the structure had a hipped roof. The
small ...
10
Archaeologia Aeliana: Or, Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to ...
The eavesdrip gully (120) was c. 0-3 m wide and very shallow (maximum depth 0
-15 m), which explains why traces of it are absent over large areas. It was filled
with a soft silt which contained occasional sandstone fragments (118).
NOTIZIE DOVE SI INCLUDE IL TERMINE «EAVESDRIP»
Vedi di che si parla nei media nazionali e internazionali e come viene utilizzato il termine ino
eavesdrip nel contesto delle seguenti notizie.
The true meaning of ordinary words...
The area between the edge of the roof and the walls was known originally as the “eavesdrip” and latterly the “eavesdrop”. The eavesdrop ... «Express.co.uk, nov 11»