Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Doors

There are so many types (decorations?) of doors on each house.
One house has a door that has a small octagon-shaped window, but another house has a big round-arched window, and there are doors that have three long squire windows, or no window but has a beautiful arabesque design iron grid. Some doors have a very strong color, but some are just plain white with four or six squire patterns.
My violin-teacher's house has a door that has a stained-glass window.

Each family chose a house on its own, so like their doors, there could be many kinds of families around the city.

1 comment:

jarvenpa said...

How interesting. I like doors--and windows. Around here the doors are pretty plain.
You write: "Each family choose a house on its own, so like there doors, there could be many kinds of families around the city."
This is an intriguing thought. Just two minor corrections: I think probably "chose" not "choose" (I think you want to use the past tense, because you are talking of something the families did in the past), and it is "their" not "there" (one of those nagging homonyms--words that sound alike but are spelled differently depending upon their meanings. "There" has to do with place- "The dog is sitting over there"; "their" is possessive, telling us something belongs to someone: "Their dog is sitting over there near the pretty door".