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hypocaust
[ hahy-puh-kawst, hip-uh- ]
noun
- a hollow space or system of channels in the floor or walls of some ancient Roman buildings that provided a central heating system by receiving and distributing the heat from a furnace.
hypocaust
/ ˈhaɪpəˌkɔːst /
noun
- an ancient Roman heating system in which hot air circulated under the floor and between double walls
Word History and Origins
Origin of hypocaust1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hypocaust1
Example Sentences
The Romans developed the hypocaust method of heating floors and walls thousands of years ago.
Earlier excavations near Scalford, Leicestershire, found traces of a building with mosaics, wall plaster and a hypocaust heating system.
It has a well-preserved hypocaust, or apparatus for warming the house by hot air.
Hypocaust, hip′o-kawst, n. among the ancients, a vaulted chamber from which the heat of stoves was distributed to baths or rooms above: now applied to the fireplace of a stove or hothouse.
"He's a powerful and original thinker, and to involve myself in the hypocaust of his imagination is toxic for my own work."
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