frescade

English

Etymology

From French frescade, from Italian frescata, from fresco (cool).[1]

Noun

frescade (plural frescades)

  1. A cool walk.
  2. A shady place.
    • 1881, Frank Chapman Bliss, Queen Esther: And Other Poems:
      Here, in this Frescade, will I sit down, with lingering Eye will gaze upon those laughing, joyous Beings
    • 1890, Paul Cushing, “The Little Gods at Work”, in The Bull i’ th’ Thorn: A Romance [], volume I, Edinburgh; London: William Blackwood and Sons, →OCLC, page 93:
      She made her way to a secluded frescade in the grounds, where was a stone belvedere, and, hard by on a natural hillock, a marble statue of Good Queen Bess on a pedestal of native rock.

References

  1. ^ frescade, n.”, in OED Online , Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.

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