Skip to content

pavilion

noun

  1. type of building
L40575 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /pəˈvɪljən/

name

  1. A community and Indian reserve in Squamish-Lillooet Regional District, British Columbia, Canada.
  2. A town and census-designated place therein, in Genesee County, New York, United States.

noun

Etymology: From Middle English pavilloun, from Anglo-Norman pavilloun, from Latin pāpiliōnem, form of pāpiliō (“butterfly, moth”) (due to resemblance of tent to a butterfly’s wings), of unknown origin. Doublet of papilio and papillon. Cognate to French pavillon (“pavilion”) and papillon (“butterfly”), and similar terms in other Romance languages.

  1. An ornate tent.
  2. A light roofed structure used as a shelter in a public place.
  3. A structure, sometimes temporary, erected to house exhibits at a fair, etc.
  4. The building where the players change clothes, wait to bat, and eat their meals.

    Only one player has hit a six over the Lord's pavillion.

  5. A detached or semi-detached building at a hospital or other building complex.
  6. The lower surface of a brilliant-cut gemstone, lying between the girdle and collet.
  7. The cartiliginous part of the outer ear; auricle.
  8. The fimbriated extremity of the Fallopian tube.
  9. A flag, ensign, or banner.
  10. A flag, ensign, or banner.
  11. An ornate tent, used either as a charge or bearing, or surrounding a shield as or atop the mantling.
  12. A covering; a canopy; figuratively, the sky.

    For after the rain when with never a stain, / The pavilion of heaven is bare, […]

verb

Etymology: From Middle English pavilloun, from Anglo-Norman pavilloun, from Latin pāpiliōnem, form of pāpiliō (“butterfly, moth”) (due to resemblance of tent to a butterfly’s wings), of unknown origin. Doublet of papilio and papillon. Cognate to French pavillon (“pavilion”) and papillon (“butterfly”), and similar terms in other Romance languages.

  1. To furnish with a pavilion.
  2. To put inside a pavilion.
  3. To enclose or surround (after Robert Grant's hymn line "pavilioned in splendour, And girded with praise").