windowglass
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English
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[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]windowglass (countable and uncountable, plural windowglasses)
- A windowpane; the glass comprising a windowpane; the windowpanes in a building (collectively).
- 1852, William Makepeace Thackeray, “Dorothea”, in The Confessions of Fitz-Boodle; and Some Passages in the Life of Major Gahagan[1], New York: Appleton, page 138:
- At first he contented himself by flattening his nose against the window-glasses of his study, and looking what the Englander was about.
- 1885, Robert Louis Stevenson, “North-west Passage: Good Night”, in A Child’s Garden of Verses[2], London: Longmans, Green & Co, page 50:
- Now we behold the embers flee
About the firelit hearth; and see
Our faces painted as we pass,
Like pictures, on the window-glass.
- 1929, Dashiell Hammett, chapter 18, in The Dain Curse[3]:
- “There was no noise as of something being thrown through the glass just before the explosion: and there’s no broken window-glass inside the room. The screen was over it, too, so we can say the pineapple wasn’t chucked in through the window.”
- 1936, William Faulkner, chapter 2, in Absalom, Absalom![4], New York: Vintage, published 1990, page 28:
- […] the house was completed save for the windowglass and the ironware which they could not make by hand […]
- 2015, John Irving, chapter 21, in Avenue of Mysteries, New York: Simon & Schuster, published 2016, page 291:
- She stared out the window of the bus, or she slept with her forehead pressed against the window glass […]