Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Signboards.
Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Signboards and, of course, Signboards synonyms and on the right images related to the word Signboards.
Signboard
Signboard Sign"board`, n.
A board, placed on or before a shop, office, etc., on which
ssome notice is given, as the name of a firm, of a business,
or the like.
Meaning of Signboards from wikipedia
- use signage. In
ancient Rome,
signboards were used for shop
fronts as well as to
announce public events.
Roman signboards were
usually made from stone...
-
signboards in
addition to the
existing English signboards. He
warned that
after one month, MNS
workers would start blackening non-Marathi
signboards....
- area
characterized by its
eccentric atmosphere and
large illuminated signboards. One of the area's most
prominent features is an
illuminated billboard...
- black-on-red-ware pottery,
square stamp seals,
seals without Indus script, a huge
signboard measuring about 3 m (9.8 ft) in length,
containing ten
letters of Indus...
-
Digital signage is a
segment of
electronic signage.
Digital displays use
technologies such as LCD, LED, OLED,
projection and e-paper to
display digital...
- and he'll
sleep again when
Bradford is dead. The
outro shows a
digital signboard indicating that dawn is dela**** by two
hours due to
scheduled maintenance...
-
thinning out,
which makes it
unsafe for the trekkers. In
March 2024, a new
signboard at
Everest Base Camp was unveiled,
sparking strong reactions from some...
- implementation/installation of signs.
Annex II,
Minimum General Requirements Concerning Signboards,
spells out the
designs of
symbols used in the directive.
While specific...
- Chiyoda's
Yurakucho district,
under which it p****es. On maps,
diagrams and
signboards, the line is
shown using the
color silver, and its
stations are given...
-
Namboku Line (7号線南北線, Nana-gō-sen Nanboku-sen). On maps,
diagrams and
signboards, the line is
shown using the
color emerald (previously
coded "teal"),...