• @robolemmy
    link
    English
    3610 months ago

    Nerdy fact: a gargoyle is only a gargoyle if it’s there for drainage from a roof or other architectural feature. If it’s just decorative, it’s a grotesque or just a plain old statue.

    • @SmoothLiquidation
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      English
      1210 months ago

      It is also worth noting that the word “gargoyle” and “gargle” have the same root word.

      gargle (v.)

      1520s, from French gargouiller “to gurgle, bubble” (14c.), from Old French gargole “throat, waterspout,” which is perhaps from garg-, imitative of throat sounds, + *goule, dialect word for “mouth,” from Latin gula “throat.” Related: Gargled; gargling. The earlier, native, form of the word was Middle English gargarize (early 15c.), from Latin gargarizare, from Greek gargarizein.

      (via etymonline)

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    610 months ago

    Depending on the culture the lion statues represent prosperity, security or prestige.

    Where I live the older generation had a tradition to place one or two lion statues on the entrance of the house when their mortgage is paid off. So prosperity and prestige I guess.