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Six bedrooms, five bathrooms; $4,500,000 A country escape in Germantown with sage-green trim and gables galore.—Matthew Sedacca, Curbed, 21 Aug. 2025 The front door, centrally located and recessed in a prominent brick faced front gable protects visitors arriving during inclement weather.—James Alexander, Hartford Courant, 22 June 2025 Palladian Windows While the windows throughout a Federal-style building are oriented to be both vertically and horizontally symmetrical, Palladian-style windows might be used in gables to add architectural interest.—Patricia Shannon, Better Homes & Gardens, 20 May 2025 But above, the building was a festive amalgam of turrets, balconies, gables, and colored bricks.—Henry Wiencek
july 22, Literary Hub, 22 July 2025 See All Example Sentences for gable
Word History
Etymology
Middle English, borrowed from Anglo-French, going back to Latin gabulus, gabulum "gibbet" (borrowed from Celtic *gablo- "fork," whence Old Irish gabul "fork, gibbet, groin," Welsh gafl "fork, groin"), perhaps influenced in sense by northern Middle English and Scots gavel "triangular end of a building," borrowed from Old Norse gafl
Note:
The word gable, attested only in Anglo-French and the French of Normandy, is unlikely to be a loan from Old Norse, which would have resulted in *gavle. Old Norse gafl appears to correspond to Old High German gibil "gable," Middle Dutch and Middle Low German gevel, and Gothic gibla, though the divergence in vocalism is unexplained.
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