The nave has a wooden roof, transepts a pointed barrel vault, and the crossing and chancel with its side chapels a ribbed vault.
Instead of there being a wooden roof as is usual in churches of this period, the whole is vaulted, and that too in a very unusual and original manner.
As usual the nave and aisles have a wooden roof, only the chancel and chapels being vaulted.
This is due to the fact that they are covered on the exterior by a wooden roof.
The nave was originally covered with a wooden roof.
The frater itself was an aisleless hall with a wooden roof.
This was modified in later times, as at Furness, where the vaulting of the chapels was removed and replaced by a wooden roof at a higher level, and screen-walls took the place of the solid divisions.
Here they may have supported the wooden roof of a cloister or porch.
A careful survey of the building shows clearly that the domical character of the chapel is not original, and that the structure when first erected was a simple hall covered with a wooden roof.
It is now covered with a wooden roof, but the arrangements of the breaks or pilasters on the walls indicate that it had originally a dome.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "wooden roof" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.