An engineered wooden door is a door made out of multiple pieces of wood. This is opposed to solid wooden doors that are made out of one piece of wood.Engineered wooden doors are usually covered by veneer to make them look like they are made from one piece of wood. They tend to be sturdier and straighter than solid doors.
Dolgellau
Dolgellau is a market town and community in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, resting on the River Wnion, a tributary of the River Mawddach. It is generally the county town of the historic county of Merionethshire (Welsh: Meirionnydd, Sir Feirionnydd), which shed its administrative condition when Gwynedd was produced in 1974. Dolgellau is the main base for climbers of Cadair Idris. Although really small, it is the second largest negotiation in Southern Gwynedd after Tywyn. The community consists of Penmaenpool. The name of the town is of unpredictable beginning, although dôl is Welsh for "field" or "dale", and also (y) gelli (soft anomaly of celli) means "grove" or "spinney", as well as is common locally in names for farms in sheltered nooks. This would seem to be the most likely derivation, offering the translation "Grove Meadow". It has actually likewise been recommended that the name might originate from words cell, suggesting "cell", translating therefore as "Meadow of [monks'] cells", however this seems less most likely considering the background of the name. The earliest tape-recorded spelling (from 1253, in the Survey of Merioneth) is "Dolkelew", although a punctuation "Dolgethley" dates from 1285. From after that until the 19th century, the majority of punctuations were along the lines of "Dôlgelly" "Dolgelley", "Dolgelly" or "Dolgelli" (Owain Glyndwr's scribe composed "Dolguelli"). Thomas Pennant made use of the kind "Dolgelleu" in his Tours of Wales, as well as this was the type utilized in the Church Registers in 1723, although it never had much currency. In 1825 the Registers had "Dolgellau", which form Robert Vaughan of Hengwrt taken on in 1836. While this form may stem from an incorrect etymology, it became typical in Welsh and also is now the standard type in both Welsh as well as English. It was taken on as the main name by the neighborhood country district council in 1958. Quickly before the closure of the community's train station it displayed signs reviewing variously Dolgelly, Dolgelley and Dolgellau.