A mite red, right-angle joint used at the corner, sumi 隅, of a building to join a wall plate, *daiwa 台輪, to the head penetrating tie beam, *kashiranuki 頭貫. Bracket complexes *tokyō 斗きょう set on the wall plates used particularly in Zen style *zenshūyō 禅宗様 buildings. Daiwadome are also used where a pillar *hashira 柱 is erected on a ground sill *dodai 土台 at the corners of a building. A simple raised gooseneck lap joint *koshikake kamatsugi 腰掛鎌継 is made on the ground sill and the underside of the pillar is cut out as a mortise to fit over it. The dovetail is also used as a slanted stub tenon *mechigaitsugi 目違継; for example, at Myōōin Gojū-no-tō 明王院五重塔 (1349), Hiroshima Prefecture. Daiwadome are also used in the tsukeshoin 附書院, a kind of extended alcove with a desk-like feature common in the shoin style *shoin-zukuri 書院造. Sometimes pins *daboso 太ぼそ are put through the center of the joint to strengthen it.