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<response><meta><generated>2026-04-07T06:25:18+01:00</generated><count>12,437</count><page>177</page><totalPages>415</totalPages><formats><json>https://marinefinds.org.uk/datalabs/terminology/objects/format/json</json><xml>https://marinefinds.org.uk/datalabs/terminology/objects/format/xml</xml><html>https://marinefinds.org.uk/datalabs/terminology/objects</html></formats></meta><objectTerms><objectTerm><id>889</id><uid>101435</uid><bmID/><ehID/><term>Grinding Wheel</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>128</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>890</id><uid>101436</uid><bmID/><ehID>96370</ehID><term>GRINDSTONE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A revolving stone used to sharpen or polish by grinding.</scopeNote><claUid>128</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4921</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>69479</ehID><term>GRINDSTONE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A large disc of stone revolving on an axis, used for grinding, sharpening and polishing.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>891</id><uid>101437</uid><bmID/><ehID>97148</ehID><term>GRIPPING EQUIPMENT</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote>Equipment used to grip an object.</scopeNote><claUid>128</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5647</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70747</ehID><term>Grist Mill</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7940</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92159</ehID><term>Gritstone Quarry</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote>Use both terms.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7941</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92160</ehID><term>GROCERS SHOP</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A shop selling tea, butter, flour, sugar, spices, tinned foods and miscellaneous household stores.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7942</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92161</ehID><term>Grocery Shop</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>3640</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>138876</ehID><term>GROIN</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>The ridge formed at the intersection of two vaulted surfaces.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>6366</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>71727</ehID><term>Grooms Cottage</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7943</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92162</ehID><term>Grot</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2995</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137828</ehID><term>GROTESQUE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A classical ornamentation featuring foliage, fruits and, unlike Arabesque, human and animal figures, sometimes fantastic or mythological in nature. The term may have originated from the fact that many examples of such ornamentation were found in grottoes.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4505</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>69022</ehID><term>GROTTO</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A shady cavern built as a garden feature. In the 18th century it usually took the form of an artificial rocky cave or apartment decorated with stalactites and shells in a wild part of the grounds.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>12225</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>84285</ehID><term>Groundnuts</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>77</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10807</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>143447</ehID><term>GROUP FILTER ROOM</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building, often with underground rooms, used to receive all reports of aircraft locations, to assimilate and assess this information in order to provide the most accurate possible picture to the Operations Room of a fighter or bomber Group.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10001</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>100543</ehID><term>GROUP HEADQUARTERS</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building used as a headquarters and reporting centre for an Army, Navy or Air Force Group.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5539</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70608</ehID><term>GROYNE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A structure extending into the sea for the purpose of preventing further movement of washed up sand and shingle.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4412</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68927</ehID><term>GRUBENHAUS</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A timber building based around a sunken hollow, the floor of which may have been suspended above the hollow to counteract dampness. Grubenhauser are believed to date from the 5th to 8th centuries AD but may be earlier. Use Grubenhauser as plural.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7944</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92163</ehID><term>Gryse</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>11954</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>79029</ehID><term>GUANO</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>The excrement of seabirds and bats used as a fertilizer.</scopeNote><claUid>77</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7945</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92164</ehID><term>Guano Works</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2996</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137829</ehID><term>GUARD CHAMBER</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A room frequently in a military building where sentries guard and protect the premises.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>5778</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>70929</ehID><term>Guard Post</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>11417</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>160503</ehID><term>Guard Room</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>11131</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>159204</ehID><term>GUARD TOWER</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A watchtower used to guard prisons, camps or other facilities.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4371</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68885</ehID><term>GUARDHOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building used for the accommodation of a military guard and/or the detainment of prisoners.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7946</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92165</ehID><term>Guards Chapel</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>3851</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>139642</ehID><term>Gudgeon</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>546</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7947</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>92166</ehID><term>GUEST COTTAGE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>Cottage provided for guests to a country house.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4279</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68791</ehID><term>GUEST HOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A separate residence for guests, a house on a private estate or a monastery building specifically for receiving visitors.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm></objectTerms></response>
