Monday, September 11, 2017
Bibelot
WORD OF THE DAY
bibelot / BEE-buh-loh / noun
Definition
1: a small household ornament or decorative object
2: trinket
Examples
"Moonlight furbished the brown cylindrical floor vase and its gnarled branch, as well as an aquarium bibelot in the shape of a ruined arch on his bedside table."
— Nicholson Baker, The New Yorker, 27 June - 4 July 1994
"The sitting room is inviting, with its smart soft furnishings and bibelots, many of them from Samantha's mother, Lady Astor's, furnishing business, OKA—a sort of one-stop-tasteful decorating shop for the well-heeled."
— Debora Robertson, The Telegraph (UK), 4 Aug. 2017
Did You Know?
Can you think of a six-letter synonym of bibelot that starts with the letter "g"? No? How about an eight-letter one? Crossword puzzle whizzes might guess that the words we are thinking of are gewgaw and gimcrack.
Like these, bibelot, which English speakers borrowed from French, has uses beyond wordplay.
In addition to its general use as a synonym of trinket, it can refer specifically to a miniature book of elegant design (such as those made by Tiffany and Faberge). It also appears regularly in the names of things as diverse as restaurants and show dogs.
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