Image:aisle.bath.abbey.arp.jpg|An aisle in
Bath Abbey,
Bath, England. The aisle is lined with wooden seating (pews), the
nave seating can be seen on the right, beyond the arcade pillars. The roof of the aisle is
fan-vaulted. File:Seitenschiff.svg|The nave-aisles in this
plan view of a cathedral are shaded pink; the arcade pillars are black dots File:Arcade diagram.png |Interior
elevation view of a Gothic cathedral, looking from the nave, with nave-aisle arcade highlighted. In
church architecture, an aisle (also known as an
yle or
alley) is more specifically a passageway to either side of the nave that is separated from the nave by
colonnades or
arcades, a row of pillars or
columns. Occasionally aisles stop at the
transepts, but often aisles can be continued around the
apse. Aisles are thus categorized as
nave-aisles,
transept-aisles or
choir-aisles. A semi-circular choir with aisles continued around it, providing access to a series of chapels, is a
chevet. are all described as having five aisles, meaning they have two side aisles either side of the nave.
Antwerp Cathedral even has seven aisles (three at either side of the central nave). In the United Kingdom, cathedrals generally only have one aisle on each side, with
Chichester Cathedral,
Elgin Cathedral and
St Mary Magdalene, Taunton being the only three exceptions. ==Supermarkets and retail stores==