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façadeThe front of a building; in architectural terms, an artificial or decorative effort.
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façade1650s, "front of a building," from French façade (16c.), from Italian facciata "the front of a building," from faccia "face," from Vulgar Latin *facia (see face (n.)). Fi [..]
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façadeAny public-facing side of a building, often featuring decorative finishes. Related: Eugène Atget. Chemiserie, Boulevard de Strasbourg. c.1900 Eugène Atget. Courtyard, 22 rue Quincampoix. 1912 Gordon M [..]
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façadedecorative front of a building.
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façadeany front
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façadeThe front exposure of any building. Often used to describe an artificial or false front which is not consistent with the construction of the rest of the building.
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façadeoutward appearance, front of building
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façadeThe front elevation or face of a structure.
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façadeAn interactive drama created by Michale Mateas and Andrew Stern. In the program, the user plays the longtime friend of Grace and Trip, a married couple in their early thirties. During an evening of dr [..]
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façadeDefinition The outside front wall of a building or structure.
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façadenoun Definition: a false face: a pretense of being something you really aren't Word History: from facade meaning "the face or front of a building"Example Sentence: The girl put on a facade and tried to seem nice to the new kid.
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façadeThe front of a building. Frequently, in architectural terms an artificial or decorative effort.
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façadeA face of a building, usually the front.
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façadeThe main or front elevation of a building
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façadeThe exterior walls of a building, especially the front or the most prominent side of the building.
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façadeA French word meaning "face" or "front." In architecture, a façade is the side of a structure, normally the front, that is architecturally or visually more signific [..]
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façadeA design pattern that unifies many small interfaces into one big simplied one. It is wrapper around the small interfaces. decorator design patterns facade wrapper
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façade(n) the face or front of a building(n) a showy misrepresentation intended to conceal something unpleasant
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façadeThe front exposure of any building. Often used to describe an artificial or false front which is not consistent with the construction of the rest of the building.
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façadeThe front elevation or face of a structure.
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façadeThe exterior face of a building that is the architectural front, sometimes distinguished from the other faces by elaboration of architectural ornamental details. Also referred to as building elevations. (Design Guidelines for Department of Defense Historic Buildings and Districts; US Department of Defense, 2008)
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façadeAn exterior wall, or face, of a building. The front facade of a building contains the building’s main entrance, the rear facade is the building’s rear exterior wall, and the side facades are a building’s side exterior walls.
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façadeThe main or front elevation of a building.
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façadethe front or principal face of a building, especially one elaborately constructed; a blind façade is a façade that is purely decorative and does not relate to the structure of the building.
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façade
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façadeSetting of upright stones flanking the entrance to a chambered tomb
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façadePrimary (usually frontage) elevation of a building
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façade
The face of a building, especially the front.
* '''2005''', , “Ghost Colts”, in Robert J. Randisi (ed.), ''Lone Star Law'',[http://books.google.com/books?id=oD_1h7qBndoC] Simon and Schus [..]
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façadeAn artificial or deceptive appearance. Also: the front or public-facing side of a building.
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façadeA façade ( (listen)) (also written facade) is generally the front part or exterior of a building. It is a loan word from the French façade (pronounced [fasad]), which means 'frontage' or 'face'.
In ar [..]
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façadeA Facade is the exterior of a building.
Facade (or the French word façade) may also refer to:
Facade constitutions
Façade (entertainment), poems by Edith Sitwell set to music by William Walton
Façade [..]
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