Advertisement
Advertisement
Windsor chair
noun
a wooden chair of many varieties, having a spindle back and legs slanting outward: common in 18th-century England and in the American colonies.
Windsor chair
noun
a simple wooden chair, popular in England and America from the 18th century, usually having a shaped seat, splayed legs, and a back of many spindles
Word History and Origins
Origin of Windsor chair1
Example Sentences
Barnett’s talent is in American Windsor chairs, and he has been nationally and internationally recognized for his work.
The plans for the store involved concrete structures planted in the centre of the shop, along with glazed green tiles and Windsor chairs.
He has been known to cry while making Windsor chairs and describes working with his hands “as a substantial way to say ‘I love you.’
Mismatched Windsor chairs are anchored by a table, the set united with sea-foam paint.
He sat down in his father’s old arm chair and motioned me into a hard Windsor chair nearby.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse