window

Boyd’s Bible Dictionary:

(wind-eye). In primitive Oriental houses the windows were simply openings upon the inner or court side of houses. But on the street or public side there were frequently latticed projections both for ventilation and sitting purposes (2 Kings 9:30; Judg. 5:28); probably the casements of Prov. 7:6; Song of Sol. 2:9).

Concise Bible Dictionary:

Tel Aviv
There are several Hebrew words so translated. Windows were openings to admit light and for ventilation; not glazed, but furnished with latticed work, through which persons could, though themselves unobserved, see what was passing outside. Some had shutters attached. There was a window in the ark Noah built, and windows in the temple; and many are to be made in the temple described by Ezekiel (Gen. 6:16; Gen. 8:6; 1 Kings 7:4-5; Ezek. 40:16-36).
Latticework Window Screen (Mashrabiyya)
In the East windows were usually made to open horizontally, which explains how a person sitting in a window could fall out (Acts 20:9). The passage in Isaiah 54:12, “I will make thy windows of agates,” is better translated, “I will make thy battlements, or pinnacles, of rubies.” At the flood the expression the “windows of heaven” is in the sense of the “floodgates,” as in the margin (Gen. 7:11).

Strong’s Dictionary of Greek Words:

Greek:
θυρίς
Transliteration:
thuris
Phonic:
thoo-rece’
Meaning:
from 2374; an aperture, i.e. window
KJV Usage:
window