poultry$62874$ - meaning and definition. What is poultry$62874$
Diclib.com
ChatGPT AI Dictionary
Enter a word or phrase in any language 👆
Language:

Translation and analysis of words by ChatGPT artificial intelligence

On this page you can get a detailed analysis of a word or phrase, produced by the best artificial intelligence technology to date:

  • how the word is used
  • frequency of use
  • it is used more often in oral or written speech
  • word translation options
  • usage examples (several phrases with translation)
  • etymology

What (who) is poultry$62874$ - definition

OFFICE AND RETAIL BUILDING IN THE CITY OF LONDON
1 poultry; Coq d'Argent; One Poultry; 1 Poultry
  • Interior atrium windows
  • Coq d'Argent restaurant on the roof of No 1 Poultry
  • John Belcher]] in the centre of a picture taken {{circa}} 1902
  • No 1 Poultry, pictured from Mansion House Street
  • The Mappin & Webb building in 1993, which was demolished to make way for No 1 Poultry

Poultry disease         
  • Infestation of ''Echidnophaga gillinacea'' fleas on the comb and around the eye of a chicken
  • 8 day old chick with difficulty breathing, due to an Avian influenza infection.
DISEASE THAT AFFLICTS POULTRY
Chicken disease; Diseases of poultry; Poultry diseases
Poultry diseases occur in poultry, which are domesticated birds kept for their meat, eggs or feathers. Poultry species include the chicken, turkey, duck, goose and ostrich.
Poultry Cross (Salisbury)         
GRADE I LISTED MARKET CROSS IN SALISBURY, UNITED KINGDOM
The Poultry Cross (Salisbury)
The Poultry Cross is a market cross in Salisbury, Wiltshire, England, marking the site of former markets. Constructed in the 14th century and modified in the 18th century it stands at the junction of Silver Street and Minster Street.
No 1 Poultry         
No 1 Poultry is a building in the City of London, allocated to office and commercial use. It occupies the apex where the eastern ends of Poultry and Queen Victoria Street meet at Mansion House Street, the western approach to Bank junction.

Wikipedia

No 1 Poultry

No 1 Poultry is a building in the City of London, allocated to office and commercial use. It occupies the apex where the eastern ends of Poultry and Queen Victoria Street meet at Mansion House Street, the western approach to Bank junction.

The design, by James Stirling, was constructed after the architect's death. It replaced a neogothic, conical-turreted, predecessor retail building, owned by developer Rudolph Palumbo and subsequently by his son, developer Peter Palumbo. Another option was a modernist minor skyscraper designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in the manner of the Seagram Building in New York City – but dropped having failed in an influential architectural and planning show-down in the 1970s. The tall but less towering design, in a postmodernist style with an outer shell of even bands of rose-pink and muted yellow stone, prevailed. The point of the apex, as before, has a clock face but higher, as above a large pointed apex set of 30 window panes.

In 2016, the landowner proposed exterior alteration. Building users, experts and neighbours persuaded the experts at the designated UK body to protect and recognise the building and did so in the notable grade II* listed building category, making it, within England, the youngest at the time. The rooftop restaurant was used for the apparent Queen's helicopter departure point in the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony.