(n.) A slender bar or pier which forms the division between the lights of windows, screens, etc.
(n.) An upright member of a framing. See Stile.
(v. t.) To furnish with mullions; to divide by mullions.
Example Sentences:
(1) Annabel Mullion was painted with her shaggy-haired dog Rattler and reappears seven years later with a pregnant belly in Expecting the Fourth 2005 (only 10x15cm), and in a larger etching, limbs still like a thoroughbred, as described by one of Freud's favourite authors, Baudelaire: "vainly have time and love sunk their teeth into her".
(2) It's a vastly different experience, still offering terrific shopping and most of the city's excessive architecture; the mad mock-chteaux, mullioned 1920s Tudor mansions, 50s-o-rama "dingbat" stucco apartment blocks: a fantastical, variegated stew characterised by architectural critic Charles Jencks as Heteropolis.
(3) The original gave Annabel Mullion's surname as Mullen.
(5) BSkyB did not unduly discriminate against BT by blocking its multi-mullion pound TV advertising campaign to promote rival Premier League coverage, Ofcom has ruled.