frontispiece

English

Etymology

From Middle French frontispice, from Latin frontispicium, from frōns (forehead) + specere (look at). Spelling altered due to folk etymology, influenced by piece.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈfɹʌn.tɪˌspiːs/

Noun

frontispiece (plural frontispieces)

  1. (publishing) An illustration that is on the page before the title page of a book, a section of one, or a magazine.
  2. (archaic, publishing) The title page of a book.
  3. (architecture) A façade, especially an ornamental one.
  4. (architecture) A small ornamental pediment, especially at the top of a window or door.

Translations

Verb

frontispiece (third-person singular simple present frontispieces, present participle frontispiecing, simple past and past participle frontispieced)

  1. (transitive, rare) To supply with a frontispiece.
    The novel was frontispieced with a portrait of the author.

References

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