Arbour vs Ramada - What's the difference?
arbour | ramada |
A shady sitting place, usually in a park or garden, and usually surrounded by climbing shrubs or vines and other vegetation.
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(US) A simple arbour or open porch, typically roofed with branches.
* 1992 , Cormac McCarthy, All the Pretty Horses :
* 2006 , Wayne R Kime, Colonel Richard Irving Dodge , p. 23:
* 2008 , Sally Binford & Lewis Binford, Archeology in Cultural Systems , p. 155:
As nouns the difference between arbour and ramada
is that arbour is a shady sitting place, usually in a park or garden, and usually surrounded by climbing shrubs or vines and other vegetation while ramada is (us) a simple arbour or open porch, typically roofed with branches.arbour
English
Alternative forms
* arbor (US)Noun
(en noun)ramada
English
Noun
(en noun)- They sat in the shade of the pole and brush ramada in front of the place and sipped their drinks and looked out at the desolate stillness of the little crossroads at noon.
- As protection against the fierce heat, he caused a ramada to be constructed over and around his tent, which he employed only for sleeping.
- The well- built structure suggested that the occupation was not temporary, and the presence of the ramada indicated that at least part of the occupation was during warm weather.