witch window

English

Etymology

From the (probably unserious) suggestion that witches could not fly through them.

Noun

witch window (plural witch windows)

  1. A window placed diagonally, with its long edge parallel to the roof, in the gable-end wall of a house (chiefly in Vermont in the United States), where a window oriented vertically or horizontally would not fit.
    • 2019 April 24, Peggy Chambers, Witches' Cliff, The Wild Rose Press Inc, →ISBN:
      At the end of the room a witch window hung at an angle in the wall. She smiled. “Witch window. How quaint.” “Vermont is famous for them. [] "
    • 2020 September 15, S. A. Hunt, The Hellion, Macmillan + ORM, →ISBN:
      " [] you've also got maybe eight to ten window,s and that's not counting the second floor and the windows in the attic—" / "Witch windows." / "What?" blurted Kenway. "Seriously? Why do they call 'em witch windows?" / "They're not witch windows," said Gendreau. "Witch windows are sashed windows half-rotated to one side. They were designed crooked to confuse witches back in the colonial days, to keep them from getting [inside]."
    • 2021 June 13, Jenay Zapparelli, The Book of Beautiful Feelings: Thee Quintessential Guide to Deliberate Creation, BookonFire Press, →ISBN, page 86:
      You might see the oddity of a “witch window” sideways by the peak of the pointy roof. The porch swing moves.