Trimble paused, looking carefully at the brownstone house. 崔博停了下来,很仔细地看着这褐色砂石墙的房子。
brownstone
[ noun ]
a reddish brown sandstone; used in buildings
<noun.substance>
a row house built of brownstone; reddish brown in color
<noun.artifact>
Brownstone \Brown"stone`\, n. 1. A dark variety of sandstone, much used for building purposes.
2. a building, especially a dwelling, faced with brownstone[1]. [PJC]
It seems they were duped by Paul the previous week. And Guare adds a third victim _ a physician who allows Paul to stay over in his brownstone.
Young Alexander, a physicist who lives with his girlfriend, Linda, in a brownstone on New York's Upper West Side and commutes to a research center on Long Island, is putting the last touches on his TOE as the story opens.
In a move to double its space, the Pierpont Morgan Library will buy, renovate and occupy a 136-year-old brownstone mansion next door, it was announced Tuesday.
The school children squealed in delight as he raced across a cobblestone street to greet them, then went to the other side to shake hands with college students who rushed out on the balconies of their brownstone homes to cheer him.
When hot, humid summer came, the affluent closed up the brownstone houses on Fifth or Madison and came to Rhode Island. Nothing much has changed, least of all the family names.
Hirschfeld was sitting in a barber chair in his studio on the top floor of an East Side brownstone where he has lived for more than 40 years with his wife, Dolly.
"I do everything with such a joy, you cannot imagine." The five men and one woman have shared the boarded-up South Bronx brownstone since 1983, their lives devoted to drugs and crime.
This brownstone palace, for it was a palace too, was one of the last and certainly the most celebrated of the old social venues of New York, the home of Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt, who lived there until the late 1940s.