-
featured such
embrasures for fore and aft fire from the
amidships battery's end guns.
Later ironclads like HMS Alexandra
featured embrasures which were 'open...
- In dentistry,
embrasures are V-shaped
valleys between adjacent teeth. They
provide a
spill way for food to
escape during chewing which essentially aids...
- four forward-facing
embrasures. The rear wall has two
embrasures and an entrance. The four
short walls each have a
single embrasure. Internally, an anti-ricochet...
-
interproximal embrasure types or
classes as
described below: Type I – the gums
fills embrasure space completely Type II – the gums
partially fills embrasure space...
- or fortifications.
Merlons are
sometimes pierced by narrow,
vertical embrasures, or tooth-like
slits designed for
observation and fire. The
space between...
- One
difference was that
there were no
embrasures at the front, only at the
sides of the bunkers.
Embrasures were only
built at the
front in special...
- was to
mount a
battery there.
There was no
intention at
first of
making embrasures in this tunnel, but an
opening was
found necessary for ventilation; as...
- or
other projectiles from
within the defences.
These gaps are
termed embrasures, also
called crenels or crenelles, and a wall or
building with them is...
- to the bone.
Embrasures are
triangularly shaped spaces located between the
proximal surfaces of
adjacent teeth. The
borders of
embrasures are
formed by...
- gaps or
indentations at
intervals in the parapet, the gaps
being called embrasures or crenels, and the
intervening high
parts being called merlons. Loophole...