Thursday, August 25, 2016
Plinth
WORD OF THE DAY
plinth \ PLINTH \ noun
Definition
1 : the lowest part of the base of an architectural column
2a : a usually square block serving as a base; broadly
2b: any of various bases or lower parts
3 : a course of stones forming a continuous foundation or base course
Examples
An empty plinth remains where the statue of the toppled dictator once commanded.
"Fabio Mauri (1926-2009) grew up in Mussolini-era Italy and his art consistently examines the ways in which the traumas of war and fascism are assimilated by history. For the most part it's the simpler works that resonate—such as a lone artillery shell on a plinth."
— Time Out, 26 Jan. 2016
Did You Know?
"These ivy-clad arcades — / These mouldering plinths ... are they all — / All of the famed, and the colossal left…?" In these lines from "The Coliseum," Edgar Allan Poe alludes to a practical feature of classical architecture. The plinth serves the important purpose of raising the base of the column it supports above the ground, thus protecting it from dampness and mold. The humble plinth is usually a mere thick block. It's humbly named, too, for the Greek word plinthos means simply "tile" or "brick." English writers have used plinth, a shortened version of the Latin form plinthus, since the mid-16th century. The word's meaning was later extended to bases for statues, vases, or busts.
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