brick masonry - определение. Что такое brick masonry
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Что (кто) такое brick masonry - определение

THIN EXTERNAL LAYER OF BRICK, STONE OR MANUFACTURED STONE APPLIED TO A SURFACE FOR DECORATIVE EFFECT
Brick veneer; Masonry Veneer
  • brick veneer residential construction (US)
  • A brick veneer wall destroyed by a tornado
Найдено результатов: 319
Masonry         
  • Gabion Wall
  • Monastery of Santa María de Obarra]], masonry construction with stones.
CRAFT OF A MASON; STONEWORK
Masonry wall; Cofferwork; Wall construction; Masonary; Dry set masonry; Masonry structure
·noun The art or occupation of a mason.
II. Masonry ·noun The craft, institution, or mysteries of Freemasons; freemasonry.
III. Masonry ·noun The work or performance of a mason; as, good or bad masonry; skillful masonry.
IV. Masonry ·noun That which is built by a mason; anything constructed of the materials used by masons, such as stone, brick, tiles, or the like. Dry masonry is applied to structures made without mortar.
Cofferwork         
  • Gabion Wall
  • Monastery of Santa María de Obarra]], masonry construction with stones.
CRAFT OF A MASON; STONEWORK
Masonry wall; Cofferwork; Wall construction; Masonary; Dry set masonry; Masonry structure
·noun Rubblework faced with stone.
masonry         
  • Gabion Wall
  • Monastery of Santa María de Obarra]], masonry construction with stones.
CRAFT OF A MASON; STONEWORK
Masonry wall; Cofferwork; Wall construction; Masonary; Dry set masonry; Masonry structure
Masonry is bricks or pieces of stone which have been stuck together with cement as part of a wall or building.
N-UNCOUNT
masonry         
  • Gabion Wall
  • Monastery of Santa María de Obarra]], masonry construction with stones.
CRAFT OF A MASON; STONEWORK
Masonry wall; Cofferwork; Wall construction; Masonary; Dry set masonry; Masonry structure
¦ noun
1. stonework.
the work of a mason.
2. (Masonry) Freemasonry.
Masonry veneer         
Masonry veneer walls consist of a single non-structural external layer of masonry, typically made of brick, stone or manufactured stone. Masonry veneer can have an air space behind it and is technically called "anchored veneer".
brick         
  • This wall in [[Beacon Hill, Boston]], shows different types of brickwork and stone foundations
  • A brick kiln in India
  • alt=
  • A wall constructed in glazed-headed [[Flemish bond]] with bricks of various shades and lengths.
  • A concrete brick-making assembly line in [[Guilinyang]] Town, Hainan, China. This operation produces a pallet containing 42 bricks, approximately every 30 seconds.
  • [[Malbork Castle]] of the [[Teutonic Order]] in Poland – the largest brick castle in the world
  • An old brick wall in [[English bond]] laid with alternating courses of ''headers'' and ''stretchers''.
  • Faces of a brick
  • Fired and unfired brick making process
  • Front Street along the [[Cane River]] in historic [[Natchitoches, Louisiana]], is paved with bricks.
  • Waterloo station]]
  • editor-last=Deplazes}}</ref>
  • Brick making at the beginning of the 20th century
  • Swedish Mexitegel is a sand-lime or lime-cement brick.
  • The ancient [[Jetavanaramaya]] [[stupa]] of [[Anuradhapura]] in [[Sri Lanka]] is one of the largest brick structures in the world.
  • The brickwork of [[Shebeli Tower]] in [[Iran]] displays 12th-century craftsmanship
  • Roman]] Basilica [[Aula Palatina]] in [[Trier]], Germany, built with fired bricks in the fourth century as an audience hall for [[Constantine I]]
  • Xhosa]] brickmaker at kiln near [[Ngcobo]] in 2007
BLOCK OR A SINGLE UNIT OF A CERAMIC MATERIAL USED IN MASONRY CONSTRUCTION
Brickmaking; Red brick; Brick tinting; Hack (masonry); A Hack; Brick walls; Brick tint; Calcium silicate brick; Hacker (masonry); Cotto (material); Buff brick; Pompeian brick; Brickmaker; Brickbaker; Bricks; Flettons; Baked brick; 🧱; 🝙; Brick sidewalk; 🝚
1) a cell phone that is too heavy or large to carry in a pant or shirt pocket.
I'm tired of carrying this brick all day.
2) Really cold.
I tried to wear a T-shirt today, but it was brick out and I had to get a sweatshirt
3) To fail terribly, or the failure itself.
I tried to cook chicken, but I bricked and burned the house down by accident.
I tried to cook chicken, but I burned the house down by accident; it was a real brick.
4) Tough, rough, and hard (Why it's good: All of a bricks characteristics fit the meaning.)
That trick was brick. I couldn't have pulled it off.
5) Used to describe someone who cancels pre-arranged plans without informing the other party. Their decision to cancel plans was either pre-meditated intent or total disregard for the other person/persons involved.
(1)-Phil Bambino threw a brick at me last night. (2)- I got bricked hard by Cavoli the other day.
red brick         
  • This wall in [[Beacon Hill, Boston]], shows different types of brickwork and stone foundations
  • A brick kiln in India
  • alt=
  • A wall constructed in glazed-headed [[Flemish bond]] with bricks of various shades and lengths.
  • A concrete brick-making assembly line in [[Guilinyang]] Town, Hainan, China. This operation produces a pallet containing 42 bricks, approximately every 30 seconds.
  • [[Malbork Castle]] of the [[Teutonic Order]] in Poland – the largest brick castle in the world
  • An old brick wall in [[English bond]] laid with alternating courses of ''headers'' and ''stretchers''.
  • Faces of a brick
  • Fired and unfired brick making process
  • Front Street along the [[Cane River]] in historic [[Natchitoches, Louisiana]], is paved with bricks.
  • Waterloo station]]
  • editor-last=Deplazes}}</ref>
  • Brick making at the beginning of the 20th century
  • Swedish Mexitegel is a sand-lime or lime-cement brick.
  • The ancient [[Jetavanaramaya]] [[stupa]] of [[Anuradhapura]] in [[Sri Lanka]] is one of the largest brick structures in the world.
  • The brickwork of [[Shebeli Tower]] in [[Iran]] displays 12th-century craftsmanship
  • Roman]] Basilica [[Aula Palatina]] in [[Trier]], Germany, built with fired bricks in the fourth century as an audience hall for [[Constantine I]]
  • Xhosa]] brickmaker at kiln near [[Ngcobo]] in 2007
BLOCK OR A SINGLE UNIT OF A CERAMIC MATERIAL USED IN MASONRY CONSTRUCTION
Brickmaking; Red brick; Brick tinting; Hack (masonry); A Hack; Brick walls; Brick tint; Calcium silicate brick; Hacker (masonry); Cotto (material); Buff brick; Pompeian brick; Brickmaker; Brickbaker; Bricks; Flettons; Baked brick; 🧱; 🝙; Brick sidewalk; 🝚
synonym of whatever, used in the stereotypical valley girl fashion.
red brick! ..like you know what you're talking about.
brick         
  • This wall in [[Beacon Hill, Boston]], shows different types of brickwork and stone foundations
  • A brick kiln in India
  • alt=
  • A wall constructed in glazed-headed [[Flemish bond]] with bricks of various shades and lengths.
  • A concrete brick-making assembly line in [[Guilinyang]] Town, Hainan, China. This operation produces a pallet containing 42 bricks, approximately every 30 seconds.
  • [[Malbork Castle]] of the [[Teutonic Order]] in Poland – the largest brick castle in the world
  • An old brick wall in [[English bond]] laid with alternating courses of ''headers'' and ''stretchers''.
  • Faces of a brick
  • Fired and unfired brick making process
  • Front Street along the [[Cane River]] in historic [[Natchitoches, Louisiana]], is paved with bricks.
  • Waterloo station]]
  • editor-last=Deplazes}}</ref>
  • Brick making at the beginning of the 20th century
  • Swedish Mexitegel is a sand-lime or lime-cement brick.
  • The ancient [[Jetavanaramaya]] [[stupa]] of [[Anuradhapura]] in [[Sri Lanka]] is one of the largest brick structures in the world.
  • The brickwork of [[Shebeli Tower]] in [[Iran]] displays 12th-century craftsmanship
  • Roman]] Basilica [[Aula Palatina]] in [[Trier]], Germany, built with fired bricks in the fourth century as an audience hall for [[Constantine I]]
  • Xhosa]] brickmaker at kiln near [[Ngcobo]] in 2007
BLOCK OR A SINGLE UNIT OF A CERAMIC MATERIAL USED IN MASONRY CONSTRUCTION
Brickmaking; Red brick; Brick tinting; Hack (masonry); A Hack; Brick walls; Brick tint; Calcium silicate brick; Hacker (masonry); Cotto (material); Buff brick; Pompeian brick; Brickmaker; Brickbaker; Bricks; Flettons; Baked brick; 🧱; 🝙; Brick sidewalk; 🝚
¦ noun
1. a small rectangular block of fired or sun-dried clay, used in building.
bricks collectively as a building material.
2. Brit. informal, dated a generous, helpful, and reliable person.
¦ verb block or enclose with a wall of bricks.
Phrases
bricks and mortar
1. buildings, especially housing.
2. [as modifier] denoting a business that operates conventionally rather than (or as well as) via the Internet.
like a ton of bricks informal with crushing weight, force, or authority.
Origin
ME: from Mid. Low Ger., MDu. bricke, brike; prob. reinforced by OFr. brique; of unknown ultimate origin.
bricks         
  • This wall in [[Beacon Hill, Boston]], shows different types of brickwork and stone foundations
  • A brick kiln in India
  • alt=
  • A wall constructed in glazed-headed [[Flemish bond]] with bricks of various shades and lengths.
  • A concrete brick-making assembly line in [[Guilinyang]] Town, Hainan, China. This operation produces a pallet containing 42 bricks, approximately every 30 seconds.
  • [[Malbork Castle]] of the [[Teutonic Order]] in Poland – the largest brick castle in the world
  • An old brick wall in [[English bond]] laid with alternating courses of ''headers'' and ''stretchers''.
  • Faces of a brick
  • Fired and unfired brick making process
  • Front Street along the [[Cane River]] in historic [[Natchitoches, Louisiana]], is paved with bricks.
  • Waterloo station]]
  • editor-last=Deplazes}}</ref>
  • Brick making at the beginning of the 20th century
  • Swedish Mexitegel is a sand-lime or lime-cement brick.
  • The ancient [[Jetavanaramaya]] [[stupa]] of [[Anuradhapura]] in [[Sri Lanka]] is one of the largest brick structures in the world.
  • The brickwork of [[Shebeli Tower]] in [[Iran]] displays 12th-century craftsmanship
  • Roman]] Basilica [[Aula Palatina]] in [[Trier]], Germany, built with fired bricks in the fourth century as an audience hall for [[Constantine I]]
  • Xhosa]] brickmaker at kiln near [[Ngcobo]] in 2007
BLOCK OR A SINGLE UNIT OF A CERAMIC MATERIAL USED IN MASONRY CONSTRUCTION
Brickmaking; Red brick; Brick tinting; Hack (masonry); A Hack; Brick walls; Brick tint; Calcium silicate brick; Hacker (masonry); Cotto (material); Buff brick; Pompeian brick; Brickmaker; Brickbaker; Bricks; Flettons; Baked brick; 🧱; 🝙; Brick sidewalk; 🝚
Housing projects, commonly used as the name for Newark, New Jersey.
My house is in the bricks.
Brickmaker         
  • This wall in [[Beacon Hill, Boston]], shows different types of brickwork and stone foundations
  • A brick kiln in India
  • alt=
  • A wall constructed in glazed-headed [[Flemish bond]] with bricks of various shades and lengths.
  • A concrete brick-making assembly line in [[Guilinyang]] Town, Hainan, China. This operation produces a pallet containing 42 bricks, approximately every 30 seconds.
  • [[Malbork Castle]] of the [[Teutonic Order]] in Poland – the largest brick castle in the world
  • An old brick wall in [[English bond]] laid with alternating courses of ''headers'' and ''stretchers''.
  • Faces of a brick
  • Fired and unfired brick making process
  • Front Street along the [[Cane River]] in historic [[Natchitoches, Louisiana]], is paved with bricks.
  • Waterloo station]]
  • editor-last=Deplazes}}</ref>
  • Brick making at the beginning of the 20th century
  • Swedish Mexitegel is a sand-lime or lime-cement brick.
  • The ancient [[Jetavanaramaya]] [[stupa]] of [[Anuradhapura]] in [[Sri Lanka]] is one of the largest brick structures in the world.
  • The brickwork of [[Shebeli Tower]] in [[Iran]] displays 12th-century craftsmanship
  • Roman]] Basilica [[Aula Palatina]] in [[Trier]], Germany, built with fired bricks in the fourth century as an audience hall for [[Constantine I]]
  • Xhosa]] brickmaker at kiln near [[Ngcobo]] in 2007
BLOCK OR A SINGLE UNIT OF A CERAMIC MATERIAL USED IN MASONRY CONSTRUCTION
Brickmaking; Red brick; Brick tinting; Hack (masonry); A Hack; Brick walls; Brick tint; Calcium silicate brick; Hacker (masonry); Cotto (material); Buff brick; Pompeian brick; Brickmaker; Brickbaker; Bricks; Flettons; Baked brick; 🧱; 🝙; Brick sidewalk; 🝚
·noun One whose occupation is to make bricks.

Википедия

Masonry veneer

Masonry veneer walls consist of a single non-structural external layer of masonry, typically made of brick, stone or manufactured stone. Masonry veneer can have an air space behind it and is technically called "anchored veneer". A masonry veneer attached directly to the backing is called "adhered veneer". The innermost element is structural, and may consist of masonry, concrete, timber or metal frame.

Because brick itself isn't waterproof, the airspace also functions as a drainage plane, allowing any water that has penetrated the veneer to drain to the bottom of the air space, where it encounters flashing (weatherproofing) and is directed to the outside through weep holes, rather than entering the building.

Other advantages of a masonry veneer include:

  • The air space can include additional insulation, which is typically in the form of rigid foam, increasing the thermal performance of the wall.
  • The structural framing or masonry backup can be erected first to allow the rest of the building structure to be completed concurrently with the outer veneer, rather than waiting for the entire wall structure to be completed before proceeding with the roof and upper floors.
  • A masonry veneer wall can be completed in a shorter time with less labor than a solid masonry wall thus saving in cost.
  • The weight of a veneer wall can be significantly less than solid masonry, resulting in economies in foundations and structural support.
  • Because they are a lighter-weight, more economical option, brick and stone masonry veneers can be used in place of natural stone or full brick to provide added aesthetic appeal to a structure.