Dictionnaire Anglais - Ojibwé:

Door

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La définition du mot "Door":
+4 rate 1. barrier of wood or other material which can be opened and closed; doorway, opening through which one enters
+1 rate 2. Movable barrier installed in the entry of a room or building to restrict access or provide visual privacy. Early doors were hides or textiles. With monumental architecture came pivoting doors of rigid, permanent materials; important chambers often had stone or bronze doors. Pompeiian doors looked much like modern wooden doors; they were constructed of stiles (vertical planks) and rails (horizontal planks) fastened together to support panels and occasionally equipped with locks and hinges. The typical Western medieval door was of vertical planks backed with horizontal or diagonal bracing. In the 20th century, a single, hollow-core panel door became most common. Other types include the revolving door, folding door, sliding door (inspired by the Japanese shoji), rolling door and Dutch door (divided horizontally so that the lower or upper part can be opened separately).
+1 rate 3. Dream symbol opportunity
rate 4. anagram odor
rate 5. anagram rood
rate 6. strike a passing person or cyclist by unexpectedly opening a car door (Slang); serve as a doorman/doorwoman of a building or nightclub
rate 7. Peninsula, northeastern Wisconsin, United States Located between Green Bay and Lake Michigan, it was named for a strait at its tip known as La Porte des Mortes ("Death's Door"). About 80 mi (130 km) long and 25 mi (40 km) wide at its base, the peninsula was visited in the 17th century by French traders and missionaries. It is now a year-round vacation area and tourism is a major business. The whole peninsula is popularly known as Door County, though Door is but one of four counties on the peninsula.
rate 8. Statement of United States foreign policy toward China. Issued by United States secretary of state John Hay (1899), the statement reaffirmed the principle that all countries should have equal access to any Chinese port open to trade. The United States sent notes to Britain, Germany, France, Italy, Japan and Russia explaining the policy to prevent them from establishing separate spheres of influence in China. Their replies were evasive, but the United States considered them acceptances of the policy. Japan's violation of the policy in 1937 led the United States to impose an oil embargo. The policy was discontinued with the communist takeover of China in 1949.
rate 9. barrier of wood, stone, metal, glass, paper, leaves, hides or a combination of materials, installed to swing, fold, slide or roll in order to close an opening to a room or building. Early doors, used throughout Mesopotamia and the ancient world, were merely hides or textiles. Doors of rigid, permanent materials appeared simultaneously with monumental architecture. Doors for important chambers were often made of stone or bronze. Stone doors, usually hung on pivots, top and bottom, were often used on tombs. A marble, paneled example, probably from the time of Augustus, was found at Pompeii; a Greek door (c. AD 200) from a tomb at Langaza, Turkey, has been preserved in the museum at Istanbul. The use of monumental bronze doors is a tradition that has persisted into the 20th century. The portals of Greek temples were often fitted with cast-bronze grills; the Romans characteristically used solid bronze double doors. They were usually supported by pivots fitted into sockets in the threshold and lintel. The earliest large examples are the 24-foot (7.3-metre) double doors of the Roman Pantheon. The Roman paneled design and mounting technique continued in Byzantine and Romanesque architecture. The art of casting doors was preserved in the Eastern Empire, the most notable example being double doors (c. 838) of the Hagia Sophia cathedral in Constantinople (now Istanbul). In the 11th century bronze castings from Constantinople were imported into southern Italy. Bronze doors were introduced into northern Europe, notably in Germany, when Charlemagne installed a Byzantine pair (cast c. 804) for the cathedral at Aachen. The first bronze doors to be cast in one piece in northern Europe were made for the Cathedral of Hildesheim (c. 1015). They were designed with a series of panels in relief, establishing a sculptural tradition of historical narrative that distinguishes Romanesque and, later, bronze doors. Hollow casting of relief panels was revived in the 12th century in southern Italy, notably by Barisanus of Trani (cathedral doors, 1175) and carried northward by artists such as Bonanno of Pisa. In 14th-century Tuscany the principal examples are the pairs of sculptured, paneled bronze doors on the Florentine Baptistery; the Gothic south doors (133036) are by Andrea Pisano and the north doors (140324) by Lorenzo Ghiberti. Ghiberti's east doors (142552) have come to be known as the Gates of Paradise (Porta del Paradiso). Bronze doors with relief panels by Antonio Filarete were cast for St. Peter's Basilica, Rome. Bronze doors were not generally used in northwestern Europe until the 18th century. The first monumental bronze doors in the United States were erected in 1863 in the Capitol at Washington, D.C. The wooden door was doubtless the most common in antiquity. Archaeological and literary evidence indicate its prevalence in Egypt and Mesopotamia. According to Pompeiian murals and surviving fragments, contemporary doors looked much like modern wood-paneled doors; they were constructed of stiles (vertical beams) and rails (horizontal beams) framed together to support panels and occasionally equipped with locks and hinges. This Roman type of door was adopted in Islamic countries. In China the wooden door usually consisted of two panels, the lower one solid and the upper one a wooden lattice backed with paper. The traditional Japanese shoji was a wood-framed, paper-covered sliding panel. The typical Western medieval door was of vertical planks backed with horizontals or diagonal bracing. It was strengthened with long iron hinges and studded with nails. In domestic architecture, interior double doors appeared in Italy in the 15th century and then in the rest of Europe and the American colonies. The paneled effect was simplified until, in the 20th century, a single, hollow-core, flush panel door has become most common. There also are several types of specialized modern doors. The louvered (or blind) door and the screen door have been used primarily in the United States. The Dutch door, a door cut in two near the middle, allowing the upper half to open while the lower half remains closed, descends from a traditional Flemish-Dutch type. The half door, being approximately half height and hung near the centre of the doorway, was especially popular in the 19th-century American West. Glazed doors, dating from the 17th century, first appeared as window casements extended to the floor. French doors (double glazed) were incorporated into English and American architecture in the late 17th and 18th centuries. At about this time, the French developed the mirrored door. Other types of 19th- and 20th-century innovations include the revolving door, the folding door, the sliding door inspired by the Japanese shoji, the canopy door (pivoting at the top of the frame) and the rolling door (of tambourlike construction), also opening to the top.
rate 10. n a flat, usually rectangular, object, often fixed at one edge, that is used to close the entrance of something such as a room or building, or the entrance itselfthe front doorthe back doora car doora sliding doora folding doora revolving doora swing door Shall I meet you at the main door of the library? Mum, there's someone at the door (= outside the front door) for you. The door to his bedroom was locked from the inside. We could hear someone knocking at/on the door. Could you open/close/shut the door, please? She asked me to answer the door (= go and open the door because someone had just knocked on it or rung the bell) . He slipped through the door when no one was looking. She offered to see me to the door (= to go with me to the door) . See picture: Doors A person on the door is someone whose job is to wait by the entrance of a building to collect tickets or to prevent particular people from entering. Door is also used to refer to a house or other building. Sam only lives a few doors (away/up/down) from us. My friend lives just two doors away. Those people next door (to us) (= living in the house beside ours) are a bit odd. The journey takes an hour door to door (= from the very beginning to the very end) . The police made door-to-door enquiries (= at every house) in the area after the murder. He took a job as a door-to-door salesman (= selling goods at people's houses) . These discussions may well open the door to/close the door on a peaceful solution (= make this possible/impossible) . Something that happens out of doors happens outside in the open air. To shut/slam the door in someone's face or shut/slam the door on someone is not to allow someone to have an opportunity to do something or to refuse to speak to them or be friendly to them. To shut/close the stable/barn door after the horse has bolted/gone means to be so late in taking action to prevent something bad happening that the bad event has already happened.
rate 11. ginger ale
rate 12. The side panels of a vehicle which permit the occupants to enter or leave the passenger compartment. In most cases the doors open so that the hinge is toward the front of the vehicle. When the hinge is toward the back of the vehicle, they are called suicide doors.
rate 13. Dream symbol (Back) rectum
rate 14. Dream symbol (Double) sharing, heart
rate 15. Dream symbol (Front) vagina
rate 16. Dream symbol (Locked door) blocking an opportunity
rate 17. Dream symbol (Unusual large glass door) intuitive, psychic
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