Lattice vs Latrated - What's the difference?
lattice | latrated |
A flat panel constructed with widely-spaced crossed thin strips of wood or other material, commonly used as a garden trellis.
(heraldry) A bearing with vertical and horizontal bands.
(crystallography) a regular spacing or arrangement of geometric points, often decorated with a motif.
(order theory) A partially ordered set in which every pair of elements has a unique supremum and an infimum.
(group theory) A discrete subgroup of Rn which spans the real vector space Rn.
To make a lattice of.
To close, as an opening, with latticework; to furnish with a lattice.
(architecture, obsolete, rare) Filled in with open lattice-work (?).
* 1833 : Thomas Leverton Donaldson, A Collection of the Most Approved Examples of Doorways, from Ancient Buildings in Greece and Italy, Expressly Measured and Delineated for This Work ,
* 1859 : Thomas Leverton Donaldson, Architectura Numismatica: Or, Architectural Medals of Classic Antiquity ,
As a noun lattice
is a flat panel constructed with widely-spaced crossed thin strips of wood or other material, commonly used as a garden trellis.As a verb lattice
is to make a lattice of.As an adjective latrated is
(architecture|obsolete|rare) filled in with open lattice-work (?).lattice
English
(wikipedia lattice)Noun
(en noun)Synonyms
* latticeworkHyponyms
* (algebra) complete lattice * (algebra) distributive latticeHypernyms
* (algebra) partially ordered setDerived terms
* Boolean lattice * complete lattice * crystal lattice * distributive lattice * lattice bridge * lattice girder * lattice energy * lattice plant * lattice point * lattice window * semilattice * space latticeSee also
* gridVerb
(lattic)- to lattice timbers
- to lattice a window
External links
* * * (commonslite)Anagrams
* ----latrated
English
Adjective
(-)page 43
- A large wooden frame'', composed of a series of mouldings, which are one foot seven inches and seven tenths wide, encloses six (not five as represented by Messrs. Taylor and Cresy), bronze “''latrated'''''” panels, thus admitting air into the interior of the building and keeping up a ventilation, even when the doors are closed. These impressions lead to the conclusion, that the restorers of the Pantheon, guided by some example now no longer in existence, adopted the doors and ' latrated panels over them from some ancient monument, and filled up the vacant space by an arrangement, such as we now see it.
page 54
- The intercolumnar lateral space next the antæ or pilasters, is latrated or filled in with open lattice-work, of which examples are to be found in several bassi-relievi.