Façade
Alternative forms
Origin
Borrowing from fr {{2}} façade, from Italian facciata, a derivation of faccia ("front"), from Latin facies ("face"); compare face.
Full definition of façade
Noun
façade
(plural façades)- (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, cathedral of Siena was furnished with a plain substantial front wall, intended to serve as the backing and support of an ornamental façade.
- (by extension) The face or front (most visible side) of any other thing, such as an organ.
- (figuratively) A deceptive or insincere outward appearance; a front.