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<response><meta><generated>2026-04-05T23:42:04+01:00</generated><count>12,437</count><page>44</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>4867</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>69404</ehID><term>BLEACHFIELD</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>Large field or yard used to lay fabrics out ready for bleaching.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7035</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91201</ehID><term>Bleaching</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7036</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91202</ehID><term>Bleaching Factory</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7037</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91203</ehID><term>Bleaching House</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>184</id><uid>100726</uid><bmID/><ehID>95259</ehID><term>BLEEDING CUP</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A container used to catch blood during bleeding.</scopeNote><claUid>128</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2634</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137458</ehID><term>BLEEDING ROOM</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A room dedicated to the drawing or letting of blood, a procedure once thought to possess medicinal properties.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7038</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91204</ehID><term>BLENDER SHED</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A building where threads of different qualities and colours are mixed together.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>185</id><uid>100727</uid><bmID/><ehID>96528</ehID><term>BLIND</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A shade for a window.</scopeNote><claUid>128</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2635</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137459</ehID><term>BLIND ARCADE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A succession of arches on shafts with no openings, attached to and used to enliven a wall.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7039</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91205</ehID><term>BLIND BACK HOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A house with windows and doors on one side only; often built facing inwards onto a burgage plot, or sometimes on a steep slope, with no apertures on the uphill side.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7040</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91206</ehID><term>BLIND BACK TERRACE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A terrace with windows and doors on one side only, often built facing inwards onto a burgage plot, or sometimes on a steep slope, with no apertures on the uphill side.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2636</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137460</ehID><term>BLIND COLONNADE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A series of columns in a straight line supporting an entablature with no openings or glazing.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>186</id><uid>100728</uid><bmID/><ehID>96540</ehID><term>BLIND FITTING</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>An object which supports or is attached to a blind.</scopeNote><claUid>128</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7041</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91207</ehID><term>Blind School</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>187</id><uid>100729</uid><bmID/><ehID>100048</ehID><term>BLINKER</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>Pieces of leather connected to a bridle designed to direct a horse's vision straight forward only.</scopeNote><claUid>128</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10374</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>140122</ehID><term>BLISTER AIRCRAFT HANGAR</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A type of transportable aircraft hangar patented by Miskins and Sons in 1939. The arched hangar was constructed of steel or wooden ribs and generally clad in steel sheets. The hangar did not require any foundations and could be anchored by iron stakes.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10381</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>140132</ehID><term>Blister Hangar</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2637</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137461</ehID><term>BLOCK</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A small piece of timber occupying the angle between two other timbers.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2638</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137462</ehID><term>Block Capital</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>546</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2639</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137463</ehID><term>BLOCK CORNICE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>An Italian cornice consisting of a bed moulding, a row of plain block corbels or modillions, and a corona or cornice.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7042</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91208</ehID><term>Block Dwellings</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7043</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91209</ehID><term>BLOCK MILL</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>Building housing machinery used in the production of wooden pulley blocks for the rigging of sailing ships.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7044</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91210</ehID><term>Block Of Flats</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2175</id><uid>100281</uid><bmID/><ehID/><term>BLOCK SHIP</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A hulk or obsolete vessel filled with cement or similar material and scuttled to block an entrance to a port or anchorage, usually as a defensive measure.</scopeNote><claUid>143</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>10256</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>133673</ehID><term>Block Works</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>2640</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>137464</ehID><term>BLOCKED COLUMN</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A column whose shaft is interrupted by square blocks.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>4316</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>68828</ehID><term>BLOCKHOUSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A detached fort covering a strategic point.</scopeNote><claUid>1</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>3612</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>138847</ehID><term>BLOCKING COURSE</term><indexTerm>Y</indexTerm><scopeNote>A plain stone course, sometimes projecting, above a cornice and counterbalancing the cantilevered sections of stone, or at the base of a building.</scopeNote><claUid>546</claUid><status>P</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7045</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91211</ehID><term>Blockmakers Workshop</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm><objectTerm><id>7046</id><uid/><bmID/><ehID>91212</ehID><term>Blockstone</term><indexTerm>N</indexTerm><scopeNote/><claUid>1</claUid><status>N</status></objectTerm></objectTerms></response>
