The longcolonnade made an admirable promenade and lounging-place and point of observation.
2
Austro-Hungary has a longcolonnade of white stone ornamented with black filigree-work and supported by columns in pairs.
3
It is like a longcolonnade of brilliant light in the centre of the otherwise dark, muddy-looking, long, dirty tunnel.
4
The plan with its four cut-corners with fountains, and its half-dome facing down the longcolonnade to the bay, is ingenious.
5
Near the gate on the road to Pavia, we passed a longcolonnade which was certainly as old as the times of the Romans.
6
Vista from south, graceful curve of court, view through north portal through Court of the Four Seasons, longcolonnade, to purple bills and bay beyond.
7
There is a Graeco-Roman appeal in the longcolonnades, the porticoes, the fountains, the courts.
8
Around the court rise longcolonnades of pillars with grotesquely carven bases and capitals of luxuriant design.
9
The church and the longcolonnades of the catacombs are built in the same way as the gateway.
10
My earliest recollections were of the clusters of columns, the longcolonnades, and lofty gateways of its magnificent mansions.
11
As a rule the lower part of the trunks is branchless; stems rise up like tall pillars in longcolonnades.
12
Longcolonnades stretched on both sides of the deserted street, and at the end shone the dome of Alexander's tomb.
13
The coachman, however, steadied his horses, and soon the longcolonnades of the Bank of Ireland were seen on the left.
14
He said there were concerns about the fate of other important parts of Palmyra, including the vast Roman-era necropolis and the main kilometre- longcolonnaded street.
15
"I tell them at the restaurant where you gone," said Chirac, bare-headed under the longcolonnade of the street.