epergne
See also: épergne
English
Epergne, Thomas Pitts I, London, 1761 - Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.
Alternative forms
Etymology
Uncertain; perhaps from French épargne (“savings, treasury”), though it is unclear how the new meaning would have been acquired.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /iˈpɝn/, /eɪˈpɝn/, enPR: ē'pûrn, ā'pûrn
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ɪˈpɜːn/
Noun
epergne (plural epergnes)
- A table centerpiece, usually made of silver, generally consisting of a central bowl with radiating dishes or holders.
- 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, “Mrs. Crane,”
- But I did like a lot of her things—the vase in the middle of the dining-room table for instance. Helen called it Mama's “epergne”. It was a two-storey thing of glass and silver and was always full of choice flowers, pure white geraniums that one longed to stroke and kiss to see if they were real, fat begonias and big heavy-headed fuchsias.
- 1959, Georgette Heyer, chapter 1, in The Unknown Ajax:
- But Richmond […] appeared to lose himself in his own reflections. Some pickled crab, which he had not touched, had been removed with a damson pie; and his sister saw, peeping around the massive silver epergne that almost obscured him from her view, that he had eaten no more than a spoonful of that either.
- 1942, Emily Carr, The Book of Small, “Mrs. Crane,”
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