spandrel

English

Two spandrels (sense 1) of an arch.

Alternative forms

Etymology

From a diminutive of Anglo-Norman spaundre, of uncertain origin, perhaps from Old French espandre (to expand, extend, spread). In the biology sense first used by Stephen Jay Gould and Richard Lewontin.[1]

Noun

spandrel (plural spandrels)

  1. (architecture) The space (often triangular) between the outer curve of an arch (the extrados) and a straight-sided figure that bounds it; the space between two contiguous arches and a straight feature above them.
    Coordinate term: pendentive
  2. (evolutionary theory) A phenotypic characteristic that evolved as a side effect of a true adaptation.
    • 2009, Anna R. Kinsella, Language Evolution and Syntactic Theory, Cambridge University Press (ISBN 9780521895309), page 13:
      Another type of theory emphasises the sometimes accidental nature of evolution. A spandrel is a structure arising as a by-product of some other architectural configuration. In evolutionary terms, a spandrel is some trait of an organism which emerges not through direct adaptionist or exaptationist means, but rather as a side effect of some other evolutionary development.
  3. (architecture) The triangular space under a stair; the material that fills the space.
  4. (architecture) A horizontal member between the windows of each storey of a tall building.
  5. An oriental rug having a pattern of arches; the design in the corners of such a rug, especially in a prayer rug.

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References

  1. S. J. Gould; R. C. Lewontin (1979-09-21), “The spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian paradigm: a critique of the adaptationist programme”, in Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences, DOI:10.1098/rspb.1979.0086
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