[
US
/ˈmjʊɹəɫ/
]
[ UK /mjˈʊɹəl/ ]
[ UK /mjˈʊɹəl/ ]
NOUN
- a painting that is applied to a wall surface
ADJECTIVE
-
of or relating to walls
mural painting
How To Use mural In A Sentence
- PAUL LEPAGE, Republican governor of Maine, ordering a 36-ft.-wide mural in a government building depicting Maine's labor history to be painted over TIME.com: Top Stories
- And they definitely participate in intramural sports. Social Beavers and Normal Women
- The outer lobbies of these enterprises often feature murals depicting satellite launches, jet travel, or electronic laser shows.
- Elegantly erotic statues stood once more in alcoves around the room, and the massive murals were nearly finished.
- Like the mounting of Detroit Revealed, the creation of Rivera's murals in 1932-33 took place at the height of an economic and political crisis, namely the Great Depression. Vince Carducci: Revealing Detroit Photographically
- According to Ghanapur station circle inspector Muralidhar, a Maoist party member Gajerla Ravi alias Ganesh sent Rs 5 lakh to Mr Kondal Rao, who had been associated with the Naxals for a long time. Journalist Arrested
- The highest expression of nineteenth century neoclassicism is seen in the wonderful mural, based on Dante's Divine Comedy, by Jacobo Gálvez and Gerardo Suárez on the dome of the Degollado Theater. Murals come to life in the Florence of Mexico: Guadalajara
- She was leaning with her back against the hotel wall which was papered over with a faded mural, her thumbs tucked in her gunbelt, staring at nothing and everything, including, it turned out, me. In my New York City, the cops wink at you and mean it.
- But instead he sat motionless, taking long drags of a cigarette and staring at a mural of a bunch of teenagers at a party.
- I left the San Francisco murals scene a few years later, tired of its supposedly socially-conscious artists backbiting and claim-jumping for grants, feeling that too many muralists only did artwork when a check arrived.