zaguán
Spanish
Etymology
From Andalusian Arabic إِسْطِوَان (ʔisṭiwān), from Arabic أُسْطُوَانَة (ʔusṭuwāna, “pillar”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): (Spain) /θaˈɡwan/ [θaˈɣ̞wãn]
- IPA(key): (Latin America) /saˈɡwan/ [saˈɣ̞wãn]
- Rhymes: -an
- Syllabification: za‧guán
Noun
zaguán m (plural zaguanes)
- vestibule; front hall or entryway; foyer
- 1956 [1944], Jorge Luis Borges, “La biblioteca de Babel”, in Ficciones, Buenos Aires: Emecé Editores, El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan, page 85:
- Una de las caras libres da a un angosto zaguán, que desemboca en otra galería, idéntica a la primera y a todas. A izquierda y a derecha del zaguán hay dos gabinetes minúsculos.
- One of the free plots faces a narrow vestibule, which leads into another gallery, identical to the first one and to all of them. To the left and right of the vestibule there are two little cabinets.
- 1997, Roberto Bolaño, “La nieve”, in Llamadas telefónicas [Last Evenings on Earth]:
- Solo encontré borrachos que me ignoraron y sombras que al pasar se ocultaban en los inmensos zaguanes de la avenida Medvedsita.
- I only found drunkards who ignored me and shadows that hid in the huge hallways of Medvedsita Avenue as they passed.
- (Mexico) gate protecting a front yard or patio
- Synonym: portón
Descendants
- → Portuguese: saguão
Further reading
- “zaguán”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
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