palagio
Italian
Etymology
From Latin palātium (“palace, large residence”), from Palātium (“Palatine”), one of the seven hills of Rome. Doublet of palazzo.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /paˈla.d͡ʒo/, [päˈl̺äːd͡ʒo̞]
- Rhymes: -adʒo
- Stress: palàgio
- Hyphenation: pa‧la‧gio
Noun
palagio m (plural palagi)
- (literary, obsolete) palace
- 1298, Marco Polo, Il Milione [The Million], Giuseppe Pagani, published 1827, Dell'isola di Zipagu (I), page 151:
- Il palagio del Signore dell'isola ee molto grande, ed è coperto d'oro, come si cuoprono di qua le chiese di piombo
- The palace of the island's Lord is very large, and is covered in gold, in a manner similar to how churches are covered in lead in our place
- 1478, Luigi Pulci, Morgante, Felice Le Monnier, published 1855, Canto II, page 26:
- E in questo ragionando, hanno veduto ¶ Un bel palagio in mezzo del deserto
- While they talked about it, they saw ¶ a beautiful palace in the middle of the desert
- c. 1800, Giuseppe Parini, Il giorno [The Day], Luigi Mussi, published 1803, Notte, lines 31-33, page 138:
- Il vulgo intanto […] ¶ fie pago assai, poi che vedrà sovente ¶ ire e tornar dal tuo palagio i primi ¶ d'arte maestri
- Meanwhile the people will be very satisfied, once they see the first art masters frequently coming and going to your palace
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- (historical) The mayoral palace.
- 1353, Giovanni Boccaccio, “Seconda giornata, Prima novella [Second Day, First Story]”, in Decamerone [Decameron], Tommaso Hedlin, published 1527, page 35:
- tutto rotto et tutto peſto il traſſero loro dalle mani, et menaronlo a palagio
- [They] dragged him out of the people's hands, all bruised and tumbled, and haled him to the palace
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