Synonyms for gables
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : gey-buh l |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈgeɪ bəl |
Top 10 synonyms for gables Other synonyms for the word gables
Définition of gables
Origin :- mid-14c., from Old French gable "facade, front, gable," from Old Norse gafl "gable, gable-end" (in north of England, the word is probably directly from Norse), probably from Proto-Germanic *gablaz "top of a pitched roof" (cf. Middle Dutch ghevel, Dutch gevel, Old High German gibil, German Geibel, Gothic gibla "gable"), from PIE *ghebhel.
- Cognates seem to be words meaning both "fork" (cf. Old English gafol, geafel, Old Saxon gafala, Dutch gaffel, Old High German gabala "pitchfork," German Gabel "fork;" Old Irish gabul "forked twig") and "head" (cf. Old High German gibilla, Old Saxon gibillia "skull").
- Possibly the primitive meaning of the words may have been 'top', 'vertex'; this may have given rise to the sense of 'gable', and this latter to the sense of 'fork', a gable being originally formed by two pieces of timber crossed at the top supporting the end of the roof-tree." [OED]
- Related: Gabled; gables.
- As in roof : noun building covering
- Circular windows at this period came into vogue in the gables of churches.
- Extract from : « English Villages » by P. H. Ditchfield
- The edges of the gables rose, not in a slope, but in a succession of notches, like stairs.
- Extract from : « Wilfrid Cumbermede » by George MacDonald
- There were two pediments, or gables, of flat pitch, one at each end.
- Extract from : « Architecture » by Thomas Roger Smith
- It was a foreign air which howled about the gables and chimneys.
- Extract from : « VC -- A Chronicle of Castle Barfield and of the Crimea » by David Christie Murray
- The stone ran up to the eaves; but the two gables were of timber.
- Extract from : « A Little Girl of Long Ago » by Amanda Millie Douglas
- There were two rooms and a storage closet upstairs in the gables.
- Extract from : « A Little Girl in Old Boston » by Amanda Millie Douglas
- The yellow-washed one, with the gables and tiled roofs—there, back on the slope.
- Extract from : « The History of Sir Richard Calmady » by Lucas Malet
- Over the hustings he introduced a glimpse of the old Ipswich gables.
- Extract from : « Pickwickian Manners and Customs » by Percy Fitzgerald
- But its gables and chimneys are not the only happy picture in Cheam.
- Extract from : « Highways and Byways in Surrey » by Eric Parker
- The castles here, with the gingerbread work on the gables, are the guildhalls.
- Extract from : « A Word Only A Word, Complete » by Georg Ebers
Antonyms for gables
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019