释义 |
atriumat‧ri‧um /ˈeɪtriəm/ noun [countable] atriumOrigin: 1500-1600 Latin - A line is fed through a peripheral vein until it reaches the right atrium of the heart.
- He was cold, very cold despite the hothouse temperature of the atrium.
- It is a large house and has two entrances, each leading into an atrium.
- The arched door, bearing the same lion and shield as Nicolo's plane, opened on to an enclosed atrium.
- The church is constructed of thin bricks with wide mortar joints; its atrium has disappeared but the narthex remains.
- The plan is that of a cross-domed basilica with nave, aisles, eastern apse and western atrium.
- Unless you work here, however, there is no public access, except to the marble atrium.
- West of the atrium is a large expanse of water popularly known as the port of Milan.
► Architecturearcade, nounarch, nounarchitect, nounarchitecture, nounatrium, nounbailey, nounbastion, nouncampanile, nouncapital, nouncaryatid, nouncloistered, adjectivecolonial, adjectiveconservationist, nounCorinthian, adjectivecornice, noundolmen, noundome, noundomed, adjectiveDoric, adjectivefloor plan, nounflying buttress, nounfolly, nounGeorgian, adjectiveGothic, adjectiveground plan, nounIonic, adjectivemodernism, nounmonolith, nounmonument, nounmonumental, adjectiveNorman, adjectiveobelisk, nounopen-plan, adjectivepedestal, nounpediment, nounperistyle, nounpitched, adjectiveplinth, nounplot, nounportico, nounquadrangle, nounrambling, adjectiverampart, nounrococo, adjectiveRomanesque, adjectivescreen, nounspan, nounsplit-level, adjectivesquare, nounstonework, nounterrace, nountracery, nountransept, nountruss, nounvaulted, adjectivevaulting, nounvestibule, noun 1a large high open space in a tall building2one of the two spaces in the top of your heart that push blood into the ventricles |