spandrel
Americannoun
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Architecture. an area between the extradoses of two adjoining arches, or between the extrados of an arch and a perpendicular through the extrados at the springing line.
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(in a steel-framed building) a panellike area between the head of a window on one level and the sill of a window immediately above.
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Philately. the decoration occupying the space at the corner of a stamp between the border and an oval or circular central design.
noun
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an approximately triangular surface bounded by the outer curve of an arch and the adjacent wall
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the surface area between two adjacent arches and the horizontal cornice above them
Etymology
Origin of spandrel
1470–80; earlier spaundrell, probably < Anglo-French spaundre, itself perhaps cognate with Old French espandre to expand
Explanation
In architecture, a spandrel is the triangle-shaped space between two arches, or between an arch and the rectangle that frames it. Often, a spandrel is formed by a wall, a ceiling, and the curve of an arch. In some structures, the spandrel is a space that's filled with decoration — Paris's Arc de Triomphe, for example, has spandrels at the top corners of its three arches, each carved with ornamental figures. Buildings constructed during the Gothic period commonly have elaborately decorated spandrels. The word comes from the Anglo-French spaundre, which is thought to be a shortened version of espandre, "expand or spread" in Old French.
Vocabulary lists containing spandrel
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Multicolored matte-glaze terra cotta in submarine blue and peach adorns the elaborate top story, main cornice and spandrel sections.
From Seattle Times • Sep. 8, 2023
And if so, is humor a spandrel, a non-adaptive side effect of intelligence, or did it originally serve some reproductive purpose?
From Scientific American • Apr. 16, 2014
From the kitchen and pantry comes the evocative aroma of curmudgeon cooked in its own juice with a leaf of spandrel and a pinch of rime.
From Time Magazine Archive
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Here, standing on the living room’s rift cut pine boards and studying the carved spandrel ornaments on the staircase, she seemed to have come to a place long destined for her.
From "The Great Santini" by Pat Conroy
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Well, a spandrel is the small brass ornament at the corner that fills in the triangular gap left between the circular face and the square outline of the case.
From Christopher and the Clockmakers by Stecher, William F. (William Frederick)
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.