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foldstool. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
foldstool, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
foldstool in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
Borrowed from Medieval Latin faldistōlium, from Proto-West Germanic *faldistōl. By surface analysis, fold + stool. See also faldstool.
Noun
foldstool (plural foldstools)
- A folding stool or collapsible seat.
1978, Hardware Retailing - Volume 134, page 105:Handibasket with foldstool
2004, Maj Gen D. K. Palit, Musings & Memories, page 196:I dropped a small wicker foldstool that I always carried as part of my camp-kit on the side of the road to mark the spot and told the driver to back down the road, guiding him with my torch – till we found a convenient place to turn the vehicle around.
2020, Francis Marion Crawford, Arethusa:Yulia had pushed forward a large foldstool, and Zoë motioned to her and her companion to sit down in a corner.
- Alternative form of faldstool
1853, James Grant, Memoirs of James, Marquis of Montrose, K.G. Captain General of Scotland, page 29:From the vast multitude who crowded the venerable aisles of St. Giles church, there rose a deafening shout of rage; and Jenny Geddes, the keeper of a greenstall, at the Tronbeam — one whose name has been embalmed, like another St. Helen, in the annals of Presbytery — hurled her foldstool at the Dean's head, exclaiming — “False thief! darest thou say the mass at my lug?"
2009, Elizabeth Chadwick ·, A Place Beyond Courage:He kicked a leather foldstool out of his way and threw himself down in his barrel chair, breathing hard.