See also: clocktower

English edit

 
A clock tower in Erbil, Iraqi Kurdistan

Noun edit

clock tower (plural clock towers)

  1. (architecture) A tower, usually in a prominent position, having a large clock in a high position, often with several faces.
    • 1969, C. P. Fitzgerald, “The Spirit of Invention”, in The Horizon History of China[1], New York: American Heritage Publishing, →ISBN, →LCCN, →OCLC, page 155:
      An astronomical clock tower, built at K'ai-feng in the eleventh century under imperial orders, relied on a highly sophisticated combination of water-driven gears (seen at right center in the cutaway diagram above) to rotate an armillary sphere (under the thatched roof) and a celestial globe (located within the tower on the second floor).
    • 2022 November 16, Paul Stephen, “Stations earn a deserved NRA ovation: Medium: Bolton”, in RAIL, number 970, page 48:
      However, the Victorian platform buildings all survive, and the station's iconic clock tower (built in 1899) was dismantled and rebuilt alongside the current frontage.

Translations edit

Further reading edit

  clock tower on Wikipedia.Wikipedia