facade - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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Borrowed from French façade, from Italian facciata, a derivation of faccia (“front”), from Latin faciēs (“face”); compare face.
facade (plural facades)
- (architecture) The face of a building, especially the front view or elevation.
1865, James Fergusson, A History of Architecture in All Countries:
In Egypt the façades of their rock-cut tombs were […] ornamented so simply and unobtrusively as rather to belie than to announce their internal magnificence.
1880, Charles Eliot Norton, Historical Studies of Church-Building in the Middle Ages:
Like so many of the finest churches, [the cathedral of Siena] was furnished with a plain substantial front wall, intended to serve as the backing and support of an ornamental façade.
1907 August, Robert W[illiam] Chambers, chapter V, in The Younger Set, New York, N.Y.: D. Appleton & Company, →OCLC:
The house of Ruthven was a small but ultra-modern limestone affair, between Madison and Fifth ; […]. As a matter of fact its narrow ornate façade presented not a single quiet space that the eyes might rest on after a tiring attempt to follow and codify the arabesques, foliations, and intricate vermiculations of what some disrespectfully dubbed as “near-aissance.”
2005, Peter Brandvold, “Ghost Colts”, in Robert J. Randisi, editor, Lone Star Law[1], Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 179:
Eight or so gunmen stood shoulder to shoulder in the gray-white trail before the barn, firing into the saloon's burning, bullet-pocked facade.
- (by extension) The face or front (most visible side) of any other thing, such as the prospect of an organ.
- (figuratively) A deceptive or insincere outward appearance.
- Synonyms: appearance, cover, front, guise, pretence; see also Thesaurus:fake
- (programming) An object serving as a simplified interface to a larger body of code, as in the facade pattern.
face of a building
- Arabic: وَاجِهَة f (wājiha)
- Armenian: ճակատ (hy) (čakat)
- Azerbaijani: fasad (az)
- Basque: fatxada
- Belarusian: фаса́д m (fasád)
- Bikol Central: atubangan (bcl), patsada
- Bulgarian: фаса́да (bg) f (fasáda)
- Catalan: façana (ca) f, (Valencia) fatxada (ca) f, frontera (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Czech: fasáda (cs) f
- Danish: facade (da) c
- Dutch: gevel (nl) m, façade (nl) f
- Esperanto: fasado
- Estonian: fassaad
- Finnish: julkisivu (fi)
- French: façade (fr) f
- German: Fassade (de) f
- Greek: πρόσοψη (el) f (prósopsi)
- Hebrew: חֲזִית (he) f (khazít)
- Hungarian: oromzat (hu), homlokzat (hu)
- Ido: fasado (io)
- Indonesian: fasad (id), muka bangunan
- Istriot: fassada f
- Italian: facciata (it) f
- Japanese: 正面 (ja) (しょうめん, shōmen), ファサード (ja) (fasādo)
- Korean: 정면(正面) (ko) (jeongmyeon), 파사드 (pasadeu)
- Latvian: fasāde f
- Lithuanian: fasadas (lt) m
- Macedonian: фаса́да f (fasáda)
- Malay: muka bangunan
- Norman: côtchiéthe f (Jersey)
- Norwegian:
- Persian: نما (fa) (namâ)
- Polish: fasada (pl) f
- Portuguese: fachada (pt) f
- Romanian: fațadă (ro) f
- Russian: фаса́д (ru) m (fasád)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Slovak: fasáda (sk) f
- Slovene: fasada (sl) f, pročelje n
- Sorbian:
- Lower Sorbian: fasada f
- Spanish: fachada (es) f, frontispicio (es) m, frontis (es) m
- Swedish: fasad (sv)
- Tagalog: dayag, karayagan
- Turkish: cephe (tr)
- Ukrainian: фаса́д m (fasád)
- Venetan: fasada (vec) f, façada f
- Walloon: divanteure (wa) f
deceptive outward appearance
- Catalan: façana (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Danish: facade (da) c
- Dutch: façade (nl) f
- Finnish: julkisivu (fi)
- French: façade (fr) f
- German: Fassade (de) f
- Greek: πρόσοψη (el) f (prósopsi)
- Hebrew: פָסוֹן (he) m (fasón), פָסָדָה f (fasáda)
- Hungarian: felszín (hu), külső (hu), látszat (hu), kirakat (hu), köntös (hu), külcsín (hu), külszín (hu), máz (hu)
- Italian: facciata (it) f
- Japanese: 外観 (ja) (がいかん, gaikan)
- Malay: zahirnya
- Maori: kāinga kanohi
- Polish: fasada (pl) f, pozór (pl) m
- Portuguese: fachada (pt) f
- Russian: фаса́д (ru) m (fasád), ши́рма (ru) f (šírma)
- Spanish: fachada (es) f
- Swedish: fasad (sv)
- “facade”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- “facade”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
From French façade, from Italian facciata, a derivation of faccia (“front”), from Latin faciēs (“face”).
facade c (singular definite facaden, plural indefinite facader)