Garden structure that can support plants and serves as a transition between sections of a yard or as an architectural feature that complements the landscape
Garden shelter providing privacy and partial protection from the weather, most commonly a lightweight, latticed framework (trellis) of wood or metal with interlaced branches of vines or climbing shrubs trained over it. If there is a distinction between an arbor and a bower, it is that the bower is an entirely natural recess whereas an arbor is only partially natural
Shaft which extends from spindle of lathe to which adaptors and drums and rotors are mounted
A spindle onto which a variety of slotting, slitting and grooving cutters can be mounted along with various spacers and a locking nut A ball bearing may also slide on the spindle to act as a guide as an alternative to a side fence
-a light, open structure either formed from trees, shrubs, or vines closely planted and twined together to be self-supporting or formed from a latticework frame covered with plants Arbors are generally less extensive and less substantial than "pergolas "
{i} thuja, type of coniferous evergreen tree of the cypress family (Botany); gray and white nerve tissues in the cerebellum that resemble trees (Anatomy)
A city of southeast Michigan west of Detroit. A research and educational center, it is the seat of the University of Michigan (founded 1817). Population: 109,592. City (pop., 2000: 114,024), southeastern Michigan, U.S. Founded in 1824, it became an agricultural centre with the coming of the railroad in 1839. The University of Michigan, which moved there from Detroit in 1837, has played a major role in Ann Arbor's growth. Private industrial research and the university's institutes of science and technology make the city a major Midwest centre for space and nuclear research
ar·bour arbours in AM, use arbor An arbour is a shelter in a garden which is formed by leaves and stems of plants growing close together over a light framework. = bower. a shelter in a garden made by making plants grow together on a frame shaped like an arch (herbier , from herbe )