The boys came at length to a brattice, which is a screen, of either wood or heavy cloth, set up in a passage to divert the current of air to a bench where workmen are engaged, and dodged down behind it, first shutting off their lights, of course. From Wordnik.com. [The Call of the Beaver Patrol or, A Break in the Glacier] Reference
Here the brattice above was a protection to him instead of a threat. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Across all this face the brattice had not been continued, approach up this slope being the most difficult to sustain. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
The other end of the gallery is closed by means of brattice cloth and paper diaphragms, the entire gallery being made practically air-tight. From Wordnik.com. [Transactions of the American Society of Civil Engineers, vol. LXX, Dec. 1910 Federal Investigations of Mine Accidents, Structural Materials and Fuels. Paper No. 1171] Reference
A great length of the brattice is in splinters, we nearly lost a mangonel over the edge when the parapet went, but we managed to haul it in over the embrasure. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Yves let him withdraw half the length of his charge before daring to reach out for the solid rail where the brattice began, and swing himself over into the gallery. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Below the panels is a brattice of Purbeck marble -- from this at the angles rise octagonal columns supporting angels, which again support a canopy of elaborate work. From Wordnik.com. [Bell's Cathedrals: The Abbey Church of Tewkesbury with some Account of the Priory Church of Deerhurst Gloucestershire] Reference
In the corner between them, a great coiling growth, blackened now in its winter hibernation, stripped of leaves, clambered as high as the battlements where the brattice began. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
A disadvantage of this bricked brattice ventilation system is the inhomogeneity of cross-sectional areas and rough Inner surfaces of the huayrachina, resulting in high friction losses. From Wordnik.com. [3.1 Bricked brattice, bricked duct] Reference
As soon as he felt they should be sufficiently distant, he crept hastily up the steps and flung himself through the embrasure, to flatten himself on the floor of the brattice under a merlon. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
The towers of La Musarderie jutted only a shallow height beyond the crenellated wall, and the vine had pushed its highest growth beyond the level of the brattice, still clinging to the stone. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Cadfael walked the length of the wall between the towers, among the men braced and still in the twilight, and saw Philip there at the end of the walk, where the wreckage of the brattice swung loose from the angle of the tower. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Cadfael circled the mass of the keep and came to the almost deserted north-western corner of the ward, where only the wall and the brattice were manned, and even much of the noise from the turmoil at the breach was strangely withdrawn into distance. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
The hollow, purposeful rhythm of the ram shook the ground underfoot, and was perforated constantly by the irregular thudding of stones and iron flung down on the sow's wooden roof from the damaged brattice above, and the embrasures along the guardwalk. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Then the first stone crashed short against the curtain wall below the brattice, and rebounded without more damage than a few flying chips of masonry, and the siege engines were rolled out to the edge of cover, and began to batter insistently at the defences. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Here in the corner of tower and wall the brattice began; he had taken careful note of it again before darkness fell, and he had seen how the thick, overgrown branches of the vine reached crabbed arms to fasten on the timber gallery that jutted from the stone. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
A group of men could back up against one of the headings that's -- that's kind of like a three -- three-sided room, and then take these materials and build a barricade in front of them, and seal it with some of the materials, brattice cloth, other materials they would have down there with them. From Wordnik.com. [CNN Transcript Jan 2, 2006] Reference
The besiegers on the ridge took the opportunity to run their heaviest mangonel forward clear of the trees, and let loose all the heaviest stones and cases of iron rubble at the defences, raising their aim to pound incessantly at the timber brattice, more vulnerable by far than the solid masonry of the wall. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
Then I dragged myself on a bit, till I felt some brattice. From Wordnik.com. [Sir George Tressady — Volume II] Reference
Another 39 workers managed to take refuge behind a barricade of brattice cloth, and when the air cleared, they were able to escape unharmed. From Wordnik.com. [The Charleston Gazette -] Reference
But still fall after fall on the further side delayed their progress, and the work of repairing the blown-out stoppings by such wood brattice as could be got at, was long and tedious. From Wordnik.com. [Sir George Tressady — Volume II] Reference
And with half the brattice on that side down, we'll be vulnerable. ". From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
True, the brattice itself could be fired. From Wordnik.com. [A River So Long] Reference
"There is a little pool by the brattice. From Wordnik.com. [Sir George Tressady — Volume II] Reference
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