A Word A Day — festoon
Good morning Netizens…
- DEFINITION
noun
- EXAMPLES
Festoons
of colored paper were draped along the classroom’s walls.
“Imagine how the parlor was created and decorated, and note the bright azalea color of the silk drapery with
festoons
lined in an apple green.” — From an article by Carleton Varney in the
Palm Beach Daily News
, March 23, 2012
- DID YOU KNOW?
“Festoon” can also be a verb that is used as a synonym of “decorate” or “adorn” (as in “the room was festooned with streamers and balloons”). The verb “festoon,” which first appeared in the late 1700s, comes from the noun “festoon,” which appeared over 100 years earlier. “Festoon” traces back (by way of French and Italian) to Latin “festa,” the plural of “festum,” meaning “festival.” “Festa” is also an ancestor of the English noun “feast.”
From Merriam-Webster Online at www.Merriam-Webster.com .
Dave
* This story was originally published as a post from the blog "Community Comment." Read all stories from this blog