0 a tall, narrow (part of a) building, especially (of) a castle -- tårn, -tårn
a church tower.
the Tower of London
1 to rise high -- rage op
She is so small that he towers above her.
The reasons for having wind towers are touched on in a fairly cursory way.
The dynamic semantics defines a large-step (or natural) semantics, which defines an evaluation relation from towers of stacks of regions and expressions to values.
Together with the elimination of one of the north smoke and ventilation towers, these sacrifices allowed construction to be started.
To the left are entry towers with pinnacle exhaust outlets.
Turrets at the four corners of the pavilion towers are similarly important parts of the ventilation system.
The tower's symmetrical skin certainly efficiently encases and thereby reflects the telescope lattice as the spine around which the building is sculpted.
Twenty-nine nosocomial outbreaks were attributed to contaminated hot- or cold-water systems, two to cooling towers and five to an unknown source.
The photosynthetic parameters were measured in exposed sun leaves of 4-7m-high trees with canopy access by means of towers.