________________
Ixvi
§ 38, 74, Farett, 1914-64 #1€IS. 9 94, Filot, ami, Fare, fara, fixx-) kinds of faakt, | 10 ukr, 1951, 51, ai, ATAT, argi-efs in snat. 11 agja, *4-a, i5, gå, gm, ani ojos. . 12 arfa, aparfa, riy, atdi, 7F4TEů, a&ari-fonts. 13 Mars, aizkar, far, 31, afer, fu-kinds of alftxi. 14 HT,
T , atafuffi-6 kinds of sat. 15 RITE, 97, 94, az, , make-6 kinds of townships. 16 ari, 9, atna, 79, af, a. 17 141, fátha, 57. 141, 14, spraga. 18 19:12am-6 kinds of 99. etc.
COS#E-2nd .
The act as we have secn, presents a view which a mountain does It has a central vertical rise with surfaces gradually sloping downwards as one recedes from the central axis and reaching eventually the ground surface. When, however, the outward peripheral circular ends do not form a complete circle but are only a part of it, the view is called a ghs when a portion of the Ro has been cut oft vertically, leaving the exposed surface a precipitous cliff. (Vide; illustration ci c .d. a vertical plane cuts off the Às a.b. into two parts
2 and b). /albl
The bathos of the Dravidian arrangeincnt is also an illustration of this aa. It has been described under this a7 68 at great lengtlı.
qal$1957-3rd 3.
This is a view assumed by a flagstaff with the flag unfurled. The best illustration of this gr is supplied by the throne pillar in the Hall of private audience at Fatehpur Sikri. The exterior of this building gives an idea that it is a double storeyed building while in fact it is a single storeyed one. There is one single apartment inside. Dr. Vincen A. Smith graphically describes it as under.“ A massive octagonal column elaborately carved rises from the centre of the tessellateci pavement, as high as the sills of the upper windows. It is surmounted by an enormous circular capital composed of three tiers of radiating brackets, each tier projecting above and in front of that below. The top of the pillar is 10 ft. in diameter. From it four stone bcams cach 10 ft. long radiate to the corners of the building where the quadrant shaped ends of the beams are received on corbelling, similar in structure to the brackets of the capital. The summit of the pillar and the galleries radiating from it were guarded by parapets of pierced stone lattice work about 15 inches high.