ADJECTIVE
- marked by columniation having free columns in porticoes either at both ends or at both sides of a structure
How To Use amphiprostyle In A Sentence
- First there is the temple in antis, or [Greek: naos en parastasin] as it is called in Greek; then the prostyle, amphiprostyle, peripteral, pseudodipteral, dipteral, and hypaethral. The Ten Books on Architecture
- In the latter, excepting in the prostyle temple, the front had hardly any distinctive characteristic, in the peripteral, amphiprostyle, and other temples the back and front were alike. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
- Its central part is designed along the lines of an amphiprostyle temple.
- Did a vestibule exist at the front only, the temple would be called prostyle; as it is, it is amphiprostyle. A History of Greek Art
- It is an amphiprostyle temple with four columns in antis in the front and rear.
- Did a vestibule exist at the front only, the temple would be called prostyle; as it is, it is amphiprostyle. A History of Greek Art
- The amphiprostyle is in all other respects like the prostyle, but has besides, in the rear, the same arrangement of columns and pediment. The Ten Books on Architecture
- First there is the temple in antis, or [Greek: naos en parastasin] as it is called in Greek; then the prostyle, amphiprostyle, peripteral, pseudodipteral, dipteral, and hypaethral. The Ten Books on Architecture
- First there is the temple in antis, or [Greek: naos en parastasin] as it is called in Greek; then the prostyle, amphiprostyle, peripteral, pseudodipteral, dipteral, and hypaethral. The Ten Books on Architecture
- Its monumental entrance, in the form of an amphiprostyle Corinthian portico, was in the southeast corner.