What's the difference between bleachers and terrace?

Bleachers


Definition:

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The red carpet part of the proceedings was quite unlike similar extravaganzas at film festivals: you go through a covered walkway into the separate, enclosed red-carpeted area bounded on either side by bleachers, seated terraces filled with paying-public onlookers who are continuously screaming with excitement, as the stars parade forward in lanes, like livestock.
  • (2) Plus bleacher seats for a cheering section.” For every David Byrne or Taylor Swift critiquing the new pay model, there are acts such as Detroit’s Death who are experiencing a career renaissance, thanks to music obsessives who trawl through back catalogues and share them in a noisy, heaving, digital jungle.
  • (3) The MCA currently represents the full gamut of the industry – from the more responsible extractives at one end of the spectrum to the fossil fuel mining reef bleachers at the other.
  • (4) In the bleachers, busloads of uniformed primary school children wave home team flags handed out by the club, and the rented fans file in.
  • (5) As long as he contains his drops issue from Florida State and tightens up his execution and consistency, Benjamin will have the biggest impact of any rookie wide receiver in the NFL this year.” Matt Miller of Bleacher Report : Sammy Watkins, WR, Buffalo Bills “Sammy Watkins was the best offensive playmaker in the entire 2014 draft class, and we’re already seeing flashes of that with his training-camp performance.
  • (6) It was just banished to the bleachers if it was mouthy.
  • (7) But the rest of Australia’s mining businesses do not have to be dragged down by association with the bleachers.
  • (8) In two female patients chronic mercurialism following topical application of skin bleachers for the treatment of freckles was diagnosed.
  • (9) Tickets for Jeter’s final home game on the secondary market are going from $248 in the bleachers up to $10K in section 19, right next to the Yankees dugout.
  • (10) And the world governing body for sailing learned more than a year ago that bleachers it wanted had been ruled out.
  • (11) The main unfavourable factor is the contamination of air by initial products (aerosols of sodium tripoli phosphate, carboxy methylcellulose, optic bleacher, enzymes et al.)
  • (12) Other early adopters include Politico , TV presenter Carson Daly and US sports site Bleacher Report .
  • (13) Still, there were a small minority of fans in the bleachers who chose to salute their former all-star standout – something of a rarity in New York sports.
  • (14) Eighty-one members of girls' basketball teams were exposed to ultraviolet light while sitting in the bleachers of a school gymnasium.
  • (15) Even if he has white adoptive parents | Rebecca Carroll Read more Mike Freeman of Bleacher Report spoke to seven anonymous NFL executives , and found that their outrage over Kaepernick’s stance was near universal.
  • (16) Persistent unsolved neurological complaints and cramp-like abdominal pains should remind that percutaneous mercury intoxication through intact skin following skin bleachers is still possible today.
  • (17) 8.55pm BST Tweets David Lengel (@LengelDavid) Via my mate John Murnane on how times have changed: $35 bleacher seats were available, though TB fans near me paid $325 per.
  • (18) I am standing blankly, realising I have no idea what to do now, but the women look like butterflies, and there are people in the bleachers who shout as each limo draws up.
  • (19) Even though Jeter was the designated hitter, the Bleacher Creatures included Jeter in the first-inning roll call.
  • (20) "In a test conducted by the federal police, the first caxirola of hardened plastic was thrown from the highest bleachers of the second arc of the Mané Garrincha Stadium in Brasília," reported Brazilian newspaper Zero Hora this week.

Terrace


Definition:

  • (v.) A raised level space, shelf, or platform of earth, supported on one or more sides by a wall, a bank of tuft, or the like, whether designed for use or pleasure.
  • (v.) A balcony, especially a large and uncovered one.
  • (v.) A flat roof to a house; as, the buildings of the Oriental nations are covered with terraces.
  • (v.) A street, or a row of houses, on a bank or the side of a hill; hence, any street, or row of houses.
  • (v.) A level plain, usually with a steep front, bordering a river, a lake, or sometimes the sea.
  • (v. t.) To form into a terrace or terraces; to furnish with a terrace or terraces, as, to terrace a garden, or a building.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In 1986, Bill Heine erected a 25ft sculpture of a shark falling through the roof of his terraced house in Oxford .
  • (2) Rather than an off-plan Oxshott monster-mansion, he moved his family to an elegant Eaton Terrace townhouse in south-west London.
  • (3) Last night, the trouble spread to the mainly Asian suburb of Manningham, an area of sprawling and deprived terraced housing estates.
  • (4) It somewhat condescendingly divides the population into 15 groups – among them, Terraced Melting Pot (“Lower-income workers, mostly young, living in tightly packed inner-urban terraces”), and Suburban Mind-sets (“Maturing families on mid-range incomes living a moderate lifestyle in suburban semis”).
  • (5) And there is plenty of beauty in London - seeing Parliament Square in the snow, the dome of St Paul's rising above the City, the simple perfection of a Georgian terrace or the quietly elegant streets of Mayfair.
  • (6) A man who had been near them reached the hotel terrace first, scrambling up a steep sandy bank.
  • (7) The Arbor was supported by Artangel , the arts commissioning body that produced Rachel Whiteread's House , her 1993 cast of a condemned terraced home, and Roger Hiorns's Seizure (2008), an empty council flat encrusted with cobalt-blue crystals.
  • (8) In Barcelona, Catalonian flags hang down from every other terraced window; a few months ago, its Nou Camp stadium was filled to 90,000-capacity, with patriots cheering on artists performing in Catalan.
  • (9) Even now, although she's living among the terrace houses that cross the Yorkshire hills of the constituency she seeks to represent, she has found her way back to the centre of the economic downturn.
  • (10) On the day I arrive a time lapse of cloud is drifting across the ridge, above a geometry of Inca stairways and terraces cut into a steep, jungly spur above the Apurímac river, 100 miles west of Cusco in southern Peru.
  • (11) The hotel itself offers studios with sea views above a breakfast terrace that also hosts a large pool and an outdoor Jacuzzi.
  • (12) In recent years, the violence has shifted away from the terraces into the streets of the capital as rival barras fight for control in a blaze of fire fights, drive-by shootings and mafia-style executions.
  • (13) What the Qataris own in Britain • HSBC Tower, the bank’s global headquarters in Canary Wharf • The Shard on the south bank of the Thames (95%) • Harrods, bought in 2010 for a reported £1.5bn • The Olympic Village in east London • Numbers 1-3 Cornwall Terrace, Regent’s Park – this week denied planning permission to be turned into a £200m single home • A 50% stake in the Shell Centre on London’s South Bank • Half of One Hyde Park, the world’s most expensive apartment block • The former US embassy building in Grosvenor Square • The site of Chelsea Barracks in west London, being turned into a luxury housing estate • 20% slice of Camden market • Stakes in Barclays, Sainsbury’s, the London Stock Exchange and Heathrow • And coming soon: Canary Wharf, after the controlling group capitulated and recommended a £2.6bn bid to shareholders Julia Kollewe
  • (14) After scarfing platefuls of seafood on the terrace, we wandered down to the harbour where two fishermen, kitted out in wetsuits, were setting out by boat across the clear turquoise water to collect goose barnacles.
  • (15) But this afternoon a Metropolitan spokesman said: "Police are investigating circumstances surrounding an incident in Carlton House Terrace, SW1, at about 8am today."
  • (16) Hillsides denuded of trees for terraced farming plots are common.
  • (17) They live in a quiet suburban street with neatly kept gardens and a mixture of privately owned and rented terraces and semi-detached houses.
  • (18) Kirsten Reid, who has twin sons aged 15, rents a terrace house 15-20 minutes' walk from her sister Elspeth's house.
  • (19) It is in a majestic salon, the walls of which are decorated with flamboyant 18th-century Flemish tapestries with a Tiepolo fresco adorning the ceiling, while the terrace overlooks a landscaped garden.
  • (20) Expansive open-plan floors are once again linked with weaving flights of escalators, only here they are suspended precipitously through dramatic interlocking rotundas, which climb from the cavernous lending library terraces, up through floating rings of bookshelves, to the heavenly reaches of the light-flooded atrium above.

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