XI); the conduit was made of burnt bricks, and was ten and a half feet in depth and three and a half feet span.
Beneath the bricks of Dungi was found another layer of burnt bricks, some of which bore the name of Ur-Engur, Dungi's immediate predecessor on the throne of Ur.
The last-named is protected with a casement-wall of burnt brickslaid in bitumen, and the upper surfaces of both stories were coated with the same material in order to protect them from the disintegrating effects of the rain.
The walls were of sun-dried brick, panelled round the bottom with large burnt bricks, about three feet high, placed one against the other.
The arch was turned with large kiln-burnt bricks, and rested upon side walls of the same material.
The wall has wings which run along the river on either side, and the banks are cased with masonry of burnt bricks.
These altars are probably the structures spoken of by early explorers and writers as hearths; there are reports that some of them were made of burnt bricks.
In the southern part of the city are the foundations of several large pyramids, apparently built of adobes, burnt bricks, and cement, since the materials named all occur among the debris.
The walls meet and form an angle at the river at each extremity of the town, where a breast-work of burnt bricks begins, and is continued along each bank.
The masonry is altogether of burnt bricks, of the size, form, and composition of those seen in the ruins of Babylon; but none of them have any writing or impression of any kind.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "burnt bricks" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.