English
Etymology
From frieze + -like.
Adjective
friezelike (comparative more friezelike, superlative most friezelike)
- Resembling a frieze
2007 February 16, Wendy Moonan, “Not Just Horses, Mind You, From George Stubbs”, in New York Times[1]:It was a commission from a man who did not own thoroughbreds, so Stubbs was able to arrange a group of idealized horses in a friezelike composition.