What words are used to describe architecture?

The jade carving diaphragm describes a rich building.

Yaotai Qiongshiyu Loutai Palace. Generally speaking, it refers to magnificent palace buildings.

Pavilions and pavilions generally refer to buildings built in gardens and courtyards for entertainment and appreciation.

Soaring into the sky describes that mountains or buildings are very high, and they all go into the clouds.

Qionglou Yuyuqiong: Meiyu; Y: The house. Refers to the palace on the moon, the Tiangong Tower. It also describes magnificent buildings.

Qionglou Jinque has Qionglou Yuyu.

Pavilions and pavilions generally refer to tall and rich buildings. Pavilion, a building with a roof and no walls.

Resplendent and magnificent describes the ornate decoration of the building, which is dazzling.

Jinbi brilliantly described the splendor and splendor of these buildings.

Brilliance and brilliance are the same.

Resplendent and resplendent.

Describe the magnificent buildings and so on.

Draw a painted roof beam and a towering roof ridge. Describe the magnificent buildings.

Fly to the clouds: hold your head high. Stand upright in the clouds. Describe buildings, peaks, etc.

Carved jade carving: carving and painting; Column: railing; Masonry: stone steps. Describe a magnificent building.

Carving jade describes rich buildings.

Pavilion: A house with more than two floors. Refers to various buildings. Hall: A tall house.

The nail head above the nail head phosphorus building is dazzling.

Felt tile refers to a few bricks and tiles left after the building is destroyed.

Architecture is the floorboard of buildings and structures. It is an artificial environment created by people in order to meet the needs of social life, using the material and technical means they have mastered and applying certain scientific laws, geomantic concepts and aesthetic laws. In order to clearly express usability, some classifications will distinguish buildings from non-building structures that people have not lived in for a long time. In addition, in order to avoid confusion, some architects deliberately divide the buildings whose appearance has been consciously created by people into "buildings". It should be pointed out that sometimes buildings can be expanded to include "non-building structures", such as bridges, electric towers and tunnels. Architecture is divided into broad sense and narrow sense. Buildings in a broad sense refer to all things artificially built, including both houses and structures. Buildings in a narrow sense refer to houses, excluding structures. A house refers to a space with a foundation, walls, roofs, doors and windows, which can shelter people from the wind and rain and allow people to live, work, study, entertain, store things or carry out other activities. Structures refer to buildings outside houses, where people generally do not directly carry out production and living activities, such as chimneys, water towers, bridges, dams and so on.