A ceiling is an overhead interior roof that covers the upper limits of a room. It is not generally considered a structural element, but a finished surface concealing the underside of the roof structure or the floor of a story above. Ceilings can be decorated to taste, and there are many examples of frescoes and artwork on ceilings, especially within religious buildings. A ceiling can also be the upper limit of a tunnel.
A ceiling is the overhead surface that covers the top of a room, typically hiding the structural elements of the roof or the floor above it. Ceilings matter because they can be decorated for aesthetic purposes—from simple finishes to elaborate artwork like frescoes—and the term also applies to upper limits in other spaces like tunnels.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).