considered a single house, because the whole is under one roof, otherwise it would seem more like a range of buildings, as it is divided into seven distinct apartments, each thirty feet square, by means of broad boards set up on end from the floor Houses and House-life of the American Aborigines - Sida 108efter Lewis Henry Morgan - 1881 - 281 sidorObegränsad förhandsgranskning - Om den här boken
| Meriwether Lewis, William Clark - 1815 - 420 sidor
...building is two hundred and twenty-six feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered as a single house, because the whole is under one roof;...each thirty feet square, by means of broad boards set on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are separated from each other by a passage or alley... | |
| Meriwether Lewis - 1817 - 674 sidor
...building is two hundred and twenty-six feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered as a single house, because the whole is under one roof;...apartments, each thirty feet square, by means of broad poles set on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are separated from each other by a passage... | |
| Meriwether Lewis, William Clark - 1842 - 412 sidor
...since the whole was under one roof: otherwise it appeared more like a range of buildings, as it was divided into seven distinct apartments, each thirty feet square, by means of broad poles set on end, and reaching from the floor to the roof. The apartments were separated from each... | |
| Meriwether Lewis - 1842 - 418 sidor
...since the whole was under one roof: otherwise it appeared more like a range of buildings, as it was divided into seven distinct apartments, each thirty feet square, by means of broad poles set on end, and reaching from the floor to the roof. The apartments were separated from each... | |
| Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - 1876 - 508 sidor
...this large building is two hundred and twenty-six feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered a single house, because the whole is under...roof; otherwise it would seem more like a range of * Travels, Lend. cd. 1814, p. 649. [ /mother and grandmother of my informant. Whatever was £/ » '... | |
| Archaeological Institute of America - 1880 - 204 sidor
...described: "This large house is two hundred and twenty-six feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered a single house, because the whole is under...means of broad boards set up on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are separated from each other by a passage or alley, four feet wide, extending... | |
| Archaeological Institute of America - 1880 - 206 sidor
...described: "This large house is two hundred and twenty-six feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered a single house, because the whole is under...means of broad boards set up on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are separated from each other by a passage or alley, four feet wide, extending... | |
| Meriwether Lewis, Elliott Coues - 1893 - 494 sidor
...This large building is 226 feet in front, entirely (/. 221} above ground, and may be considered as a single house, because the whole is under one roof;...it is divided into seven distinct apartments, each 30 feet square, by means of broad boards set on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are... | |
| Meriwether Lewis, William Clark - 1902 - 402 sidor
...building is two hundred and twentysix feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered as a single house, because the whole is under one roof;...each thirty feet square, by means of broad boards set on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are separated from each other by a passage or alley... | |
| Meriwether Lewis, William Clark - 1902 - 620 sidor
...building is two hundred and twenty-six feet in front, entirely above ground, and may be considered as a single house, because the whole is under one roof;...each thirty feet square, by means of broad boards set on end from the floor to the roof. The apartments are separated from each other by a passage or alley... | |
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