a facade with marble columns
Add the first column of numbers.
The article takes up three columns.
The error appears at the bottom of the second column.
She writes a weekly column for the paper.
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Arrange them into a three-by-three grid, where each row and column has a top, a bottom, and a layer.—
Anna Popp,
Travel + Leisure,
5 July 2026 More recently, scaffolding was erected for restoration work on the building's stone columns.—
Lauren Peller,
ABC News,
6 July 2026 Here is a brief overview and judgement calls of several garden insects that challenge our assumptions about who belongs in which column.—
Rita Perwich,
San Diego Union-Tribune,
4 July 2026 Only his 17-year-old brother, his legs pinned under columns that required heavy machinery to lift, responded.—
Fernanda Pesce,
Los Angeles Times,
6 July 2026 See All Example Sentences for column
Word History
Etymology
Middle English columne, from Anglo-French columpne, from Latin columna, from columen top; akin to Latin collis hill — more at hill