Installing a window ac – Haier air conditioner
Installing A Window Ac
- Place or fix (equipment or machinery) in position ready for use
- (install) set up for use; “install the washer and dryer”; “We put in a new sink”
- Establish (someone) in a new place, condition, or role
- installation: the act of installing something (as equipment); “the telephone installation took only a few minutes”
- Place (someone) in a new position of authority, esp. with ceremony
- (install) put into an office or a position; “the new president was installed immediately after the election”
installing
- A pane of glass filling such an opening
- a framework of wood or metal that contains a glass windowpane and is built into a wall or roof to admit light or air
- An opening in a wall or screen through which customers are served in a bank, ticket office, or similar building
- a transparent opening in a vehicle that allow vision out of the sides or back; usually is capable of being opened
- a transparent panel (as of an envelope) inserted in an otherwise opaque material
- An opening in the wall or roof of a building or vehicle that is fitted with glass or other transparent material in a frame to admit light or air and allow people to see out
window
- Before Christ
- actinium: a radioactive element of the actinide series; found in uranium ores
- .ac is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Ascension Island. It is administered by NIC.AC, a subsidiary of the Internet Computer Bureau based in the United Kingdom.
- Alternating current
- alternating current: an electric current that reverses direction sinusoidally; “In the US most household current is AC at 60 cycles per second”
- Air conditioning
ac
Datestone and Carving above East Window —detail
Situated in the grounds of the Hospital of God, the chapel stands directly to the west of the parish church and to the south-east of the master’s house. Having become ruinous, the old building was taken down in 1788 and the present structure erected on the old foundations except on the north side. In plan it is a plain rectangle measuring internally 36 ft. 6 in. by 24 ft. 6 in., with a bell-turret at the west end forming a small porch 5 ft. by 3 ft. 6 in., approached by a flight of steps. The roof is slated, and finishes on a moulded corbel table which is carried along the end gables. There are three round-headed sash windows on each side, and a similar window now built up at the east end. Above the east window outside is the date 1788 with a carved head over. The turret has two round-headed openings east and west and one to the north and south, and has a hipped slated roof with good iron weather vane. An old stoup is built into the south end of the east wall, and the ancient altar slab is still in use. In the centre of the flagged floor is a large slab of blue stone round which, on a fillet of brass, is the inscription, ‘+ Hic Iacet Magister Wilelmvs de Middiltovn Sacre Pagine Doctor Qvondam Cvstos Dom istivs Orate Pro Eo.’
On the north wall is a brass with an inscription in Gothic characters: ‘Orate pro a[nima]abus Nicholai hulme Jo[han]is Kelyng et Wi[llel]mi Estfelde clericorum quond[am] huius hospital’s magistrorum ac parentum fundatorum suorum benefactorum atqz o[mniu]m fidelium def[un]ctorum quorum a[nimabus] p[ro]picietr deus Amen.’
The interior of the chapel was restored in 1899 and new oak fittings in the 18th-century style inserted.
Hutchinson, writing a few years before the demolition of the old chapel, describes the chancel as entire, but the nave as much mutilated, ‘nothing but the cross aile remaining at the north-west and southwest corners, at which you enter; and there is a short aile at each end, formed by two pillars supporting pointed arches … the pillars of the south aile are circular, the north octagonal.’ The chancel alone was then used for divine service, the ‘outer part serving as a saloon or portico, separated by a screen and stalls covered with heavy canopies of wood-work.’ Over the entrance to the chancel were the Royal arms dated 1696. The chapel contained a ‘fine recumbent effigy, delicately cut in stone,’ and the wooden effigy of an ecclesiastic said to have been that of Andrew Stanley, the first master. Both figures have disappeared. Below the latter was found a stone coffin containing a skeleton with a chalice lying on the left side.
The Hospital of God was founded by Robert de Stichell, the Bishop of Durham in 1273 to care for poor and elderly people.
King Henry III had obtained the Manor of Greatham from Simon de Montfort following his defeat at the battle of Evesham in 1265. Robert de Stichell then made and won a legal claim for the land on the basis that as Crown Palatine he had the right to all land plundered or gained within his royal franchise as Bishop of Durham.
Having obtained possession of the Manor of Greatham the Bishop built the first Hospital – a place of shelter and hospitality – for five priests and forty poor lay men. He installed a Master to care for them and dedicated the Hospital to the Honour of God, the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Cuthbert.
Interior Looking East
Situated in the grounds of the Hospital of God, the chapel stands directly to the west of the parish church and to the south-east of the master’s house. Having become ruinous, the old building was taken down in 1788 and the present structure erected on the old foundations except on the north side. In plan it is a plain rectangle measuring internally 36 ft. 6 in. by 24 ft. 6 in., with a bell-turret at the west end forming a small porch 5 ft. by 3 ft. 6 in., approached by a flight of steps. The roof is slated, and finishes on a moulded corbel table which is carried along the end gables. There are three round-headed sash windows on each side, and a similar window now built up at the east end. Above the east window outside is the date 1788 with a carved head over. The turret has two round-headed openings east and west and one to the north and south, and has a hipped slated roof with good iron weather vane. An old stoup is built into the south end of the east wall, and the ancient altar slab is still in use. In the centre of the flagged floor is a large slab of blue stone round which, on a fillet of brass, is the inscription, ‘+ Hic Iacet Magister Wilelmvs de Middiltovn Sacre Pagine Doctor Qvondam Cvstos Dom istivs Orate Pro Eo.’
On the north wall is a brass with an inscription in Gothic characters: ‘Orate pro a[nima]abus Nicholai hulme Jo[han]is Kelyng et Wi[llel]mi Estfelde clericorum quond[am] huius hospital’s magistrorum ac parentum fundatorum suorum benefactorum atqz o[mniu]m fidelium def[un]ctorum quorum a[nimabus] p[ro]picietr deus Amen.’
The interior of the chapel was restored in 1899 and new oak fittings in the 18th-century style inserted.
Hutchinson, writing a few years before the demolition of the old chapel, describes the chancel as entire, but the nave as much mutilated, ‘nothing but the cross aile remaining at the north-west and southwest corners, at which you enter; and there is a short aile at each end, formed by two pillars supporting pointed arches … the pillars of the south aile are circular, the north octagonal.’ The chancel alone was then used for divine service, the ‘outer part serving as a saloon or portico, separated by a screen and stalls covered with heavy canopies of wood-work.’ Over the entrance to the chancel were the Royal arms dated 1696. The chapel contained a ‘fine recumbent effigy, delicately cut in stone,’ and the wooden effigy of an ecclesiastic said to have been that of Andrew Stanley, the first master. Both figures have disappeared. Below the latter was found a stone coffin containing a skeleton with a chalice lying on the left side.
The Hospital of God was founded by Robert de Stichell, the Bishop of Durham in 1273 to care for poor and elderly people.
King Henry III had obtained the Manor of Greatham from Simon de Montfort following his defeat at the battle of Evesham in 1265. Robert de Stichell then made and won a legal claim for the land on the basis that as Crown Palatine he had the right to all land plundered or gained within his royal franchise as Bishop of Durham.
Having obtained possession of the Manor of Greatham the Bishop built the first Hospital – a place of shelter and hospitality – for five priests and forty poor lay men. He installed a Master to care for them and dedicated the Hospital to the Honour of God, the Blessed Virgin Mary and Saint Cuthbert.