parterre

listen to the pronunciation of parterre
Английский Язык - Турецкий язык
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
A garden with paths between such flowerbeds
A flowerbed, particularly an elevated one
A theater balcony, especially in an opera house; above the box seats, but definitely below family circle
An apartment balcony
a flower garden with beds and paths designed to form a pattern, the outdoor and botanical equivalent to an indoor Persian carpet; literally "on the ground" in French
an ornamental flower garden; beds and paths are arranged to form a pattern
In landscape gardening, a formal area of planting, usually square or rectangular
The pit of a theater; the parquet
a part of a garden with areas of flowers surrounded by low hedges in a formal pattern. Division of garden beds in an ornamental pattern. The parterre grew out of the knot garden, a medieval form of bed in which various plant types were separated from each other by hedges. In the 16th century, the hedges were replaced by wooden or leaden shapes or by lines of shells or coal, and the areas between were filled with colored sand or stone chips. The naturalistic English garden of the 18th century displaced the elaborate parterre
{i} decoratively arranged flowers and grass; seating in a theatre
seating at the rear of the main floor (beneath the balconies)
All Knot Gardens are parterres, but not all parterres form a knot The name parterre (pronounced PAR - tare) is from Old French 'par terre' literally translated 'on the ground' It is a flower garden having the beds and paths arranged to form a pattern This precise and informative definition comes to us from the site of Lakewold Gardens On this site you can visit their knot garden and their parterre You can tell someone has been pruning, pruning, pruning (Just can't seem to get past all that work)
An ornamental and diversified arrangement of beds or plots, in which flowers are cultivated, with intervening spaces of gravel or turf for walking on
parterres
plural of parterre
parterre

    Расстановка переносов

    par·terre

    Произношение

    Этимология

    [ pär-'ter ] (noun.) circa 1639. French
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