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Example sentences for "interiors"

Lexicographically close words:
interim; interior; interiora; interiore; interiorly; interiour; interisland; interjacent; interjected; interjection
  1. Bark of cedar, oak, or hickory was used, and made a thicker and better insulated material than mats, which in summer permitted the interiors to heat up like stoves.

  2. At one time it was one of the finest interiors in Paris, the royal painters and artists vying with each other in its adornment.

  3. The church, as it exists now, in a state of complete restoration, is one of the finest church interiors in Paris, and the best specimen of its peculiar kind of architecture in the world.

  4. Home after home had been blasted--their intimate yet harrowing interiors were revealed.

  5. Once inside, Honora would look helplessly about her in the darkness while her escort would raise the shades, admitting a gloomy light on bare interiors or shrouded furniture.

  6. The hangings that covered the entrance to each suite of chambers had been thrown aside and the interiors were vacant.

  7. Though it was day when he entered the great capital of the Pharaohs, the streets were almost deserted, and every doorway and window showed interiors brilliant with a multitude of lamps.

  8. A great many of the wall paintings in the interiors of rich men's homes have been preserved and some of them are fairly spicy as to subject and text.

  9. In winter their interiors are warmer and less damp than the outer air--which is more than can be said for the lands across the sea, where you have to go outdoors to thaw.

  10. He caught glimpses of dun interiors when forced aside by a panier-laden mule or lumbering camel, and the knowledge was thrust upon him in many ways that his presence in this minor artery of the bazaar was resented by its inhabitants.

  11. Near the corner, on the west side, there was a large brown-stone house, with curtains showing like gossamer webs against the lighted interiors of the rooms.

  12. At a distance indescribably homogeneous, as it passed the lighted windows of shops it was seen to be composed of individual atoms, and their outlines were relieved against the garish interiors like a panorama of automatic silhouettes.

  13. Their interiors were divided by architectural members, and contained manifold works of art and objects of value--a varied richness, which called for an increased splendor of light, possible only by artificial illumination.

  14. Many of his interiors are very rich and harmonious although commonly over-elaborated.

  15. Though he painted, especially in early life, domestic scenes and interiors invested with deeply sympathetic feeling, it is as a landscape painter that Maris will be famous.

  16. The interiors appear to be decorated in the same manner, as they are seen through the open windows and by the light of many lamps suspended from the ceilings.

  17. The interiors of the houses are, generally speaking, more embellished than those of Calcutta; the greater part have handsome ceilings, and the doorways and windows are decorated with mouldings, and otherwise better finished.

  18. They seem to be a numerous class, and I hope shortly to see the interiors of some of their churches.

  19. These residences are scattered all over Bombay, the interiors being all richly furnished, and many fitted up with infinite taste and elegance.

  20. Many are for the interiors of public buildings such as halls, stores, churches, offices, and railway stations.

  21. A good many such timepieces were made for the interiors of churches or for their steeples.

  22. Continually came the hollow sound of things falling and slipping within the smashed interiors behind the facades.

  23. Within the darkness of the interiors I could discern the stairs.

  24. For example, designs were no longer confined to the interiors of the bowls, but were also painted on the exteriors and upon a great variety of vessel forms.

  25. Other interiors are more magnificent in architectural display, none are lovelier than this, and there is nothing to mar the general harmony, no gilding or artificial flowers, no ecclesiastical trumpery, no meretricious decoration.

  26. Without doubt, nothing lends such magnificence to interiors as marbles, but they require the spaciousness and princeliness of such a château to be displayed to advantage.

  27. This magnificent apartment ranks with Westminster Hall and the Hall of Christ Church, Oxford, as one of the finest open-timbered interiors in Europe.

  28. Some of the shops, with painfully modern fronts, have low panelled interiors and carved staircases.

  29. That wonderful little museum and its adjacent potteries, which cover the face of Italy like ant-hills, are to-day contributors to innumerable beautiful interiors in every part of America.

  30. Nothing has ever been done in enriching interiors which approaches in splendor the best work of the Byzantine builders, and Sta.

  31. On the other hand, the man whose interiors are not open is unable to see his evils and falsities, because he is not above them but in them.

  32. Thus did my interiors appear before them, for when talking with them as a spirit my material body was not seen.

  33. Divine truths open the interiors of man because man was so created as to be in respect to his internal man an image of heaven, and in respect to his external an image of the world (n.

  34. That in respect to his interiors man is a spirit there are further evidences in what has been said and shown above (n.

  35. Footnote 1} In respect to his interiors man is a spirit (n.

  36. Accordingly as man's interiors are formed and made one with his exteriors man sees and perceives.

  37. Let it be clearly understood that with the angels it is the interiors that cause them to be in one heaven or another; for as their interiors are more open to the Lord they are in a more interior heaven.

  38. Few church interiors can equal this for jeweled riches: 'And the building of the wall thereof was of jasper stone.

  39. There are few church interiors in Europe more stately and unique than that of the brick abbatial in Toulouse, called the Jacobins', a name given the Dominicans because their Paris convent was in the rue St. Jacques.

  40. The partiality of the meridional for unencumbered interiors had something to do with making the procession path thirty feet wide.

  41. The church interiors were often somber and cramped.

  42. This is because with them there is no veil between interiors and exteriors, or between the spiritual and the natural things of the mind, as there is with the sensuous.

  43. Good and the truth of good can be introduced into man's interiors only so far as evil and the falsity of evil there have been removed.

  44. Thus they have an outmost and lowest which in itself is fixed and stable, within and by which the interiors can be held in connection.

  45. The enjoyment of those evils would occupy the interiors of his mind to such an extent that it would burst open the door.

  46. Their interiors in respect to religion appear in the light of the spiritual world like bright clouds, but those of the former like dark clouds.

  47. It is also said of them in the spiritual world that as they confirm themselves they at length close the interiors of their mind "to the nose," for the nose signifies perception of truth, of which they have none.

  48. Nor can they be given to those born stupid and dull or to any made so by the torpor of idleness, or by a disease which perverts or entirely closes the interiors of the mind, or by love of a bestial life.

  49. By man's interiors the internal of his thought is meant.

  50. Love opens the mind's interiors but fear closes them, and when they are closed man thinks little and only what comes to the lower mind or to the senses.

  51. This state closes the interiors of his mind where the two faculties of his life, liberty and reason, especially reside.

  52. The side archways are connected with the central archway by small openings in the intervening walls, and the arched interiors of all three are decorated by square coffers with rosette ornaments.

  53. The interiors were faced with marble, of which traces are left.

  54. This system of building gave the world those great permanent interiors which were the first in the world’s history to be of architectural importance.

  55. The construction of the mediæval churches is as complex as that of the greatest Roman monuments; this coming from a necessity of providing interiors relatively larger than those of the Roman imperial epoch.

  56. Mile upon mile of colonnades, as Greek in taste as the later age would allow, enclosed and led up to superb interiors of a dignity and magnificence immeasurably beyond anything conceived by the Greeks.

  57. And yet this is one of the most attractive interiors in Europe, and one may visit it many times during a season and like it better all the time.

  58. We have no Greek interiors to study and the exteriors at once tell us how the whole structure was brought into being, and also that it could not fail to serve its daily uses in a very perfect manner.

  59. Painting and sculpture embellished these interiors and exteriors, although these were generally crude and barbaric in their execution and representation.


  60. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "interiors" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.