51Թ

Advertisement

Advertisement

gueridon

[ ger-ee-don; French gey-ree-dawn ]

noun

French Furniture.
plural gueridons
  1. a small table or stand, as for holding a candelabrum.


Discover More

51Թ History and Origins

Origin of gueridon1

1850–55; < French éDz, after the proper name ҳéDz
Discover More

Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Or if your dining area lacks a silver-trimmed tableside gueridon from which to serve the pepperoni pie just delivered from the local pizzeria, there are those, too.

From

He reformed the art by suppressing the suspiciously-draped tables of his predecessors, substituting for these "clumsy confederate boxes" light and elegant tables and little gueridons, undraped.

From

Brightly shone the light of chandelier and gueridon through the plate glass windows of the royal palace on the Ritterholm, and most beautifully was its brilliancy reflected by the quiet waters of the Malar lake.

From

At last the house-keeper brought forward a little round table, such as once was called a gueridon, on which was a cup of strong mocha, the perfume of which filled the room.

From

The table, a rickety gueridon, overbalanced, and away rolled my uncorked phial of prussic acid and fell into a hundred pieces on the tessellated floor.

From

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement