Definition of Salons

1. Noun. (plural of salon) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Salons

1. salon [n] - See also: salon

Lexicographical Neighbors of Salons

salmwood
salo
salogen
salol
salol-camphor
salolase
salols
salometer
salometers
salon
saloniste
salonistes
salonlike
salonnière
salonnières
salons (current term)
saloon keeper
saloonkeeper
saloonkeepers
saloonkeeping
saloonlike
saloons
saloop
saloops
salop
salopettes
salopian
salops

Literary usage of Salons

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country (1866)
"salons.1 THE club is an essentially mas- . online institution : the seat, the central point, of female influence is the salon ; and an important social ..."

2. Biographical and Critical Essays: Reprinted from Reviews, with Additions and by Abraham Hayward (1873)
"Les salons de Paris: Foyers ... books which we propose to use as the text-books of this article : ' When we speak of salons,' says Madame Ancelot, ..."

3. Biographical and Critical Essays: Reprinted from Reviews, with Additions and by Abraham Hayward (1873)
"Lea salons de Paris: Foyers ... of the books which we propose to use as the text-books of this article : ' When we speak of salons,'' says Madame Ancelot, ..."

4. The French Court and Society: Reign of Louis XVI and First Empire by Catherine Charlotte Jackson (1881)
"HE Parisian salons of the reign of Louis XV. enjoyed a so widespread celebrity ... But in 1776 those salons for the most part were either wholly extinct,—as ..."

5. The Canadian Monthly and National Review by William White (1873)
"salons. The following Selection is from a volume of Essays by Mr. Hayward, QC, well known as the translator of "Faust," but still better known in the social ..."

6. A History of English Dramatic Literature to the Death of Queen Anne by Adolphus William Ward (1899)
"The salons Nowhere was the determination to take refuge in an imaginary world, and through this medium to view the actual, more likely to assert itself than ..."

7. Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country (1866)
"salons.1 THE club is an essentially mas- . online institution : the seat, the central point, of female influence is the salon ; and an important social ..."

8. Biographical and Critical Essays: Reprinted from Reviews, with Additions and by Abraham Hayward (1873)
"Les salons de Paris: Foyers ... books which we propose to use as the text-books of this article : ' When we speak of salons,' says Madame Ancelot, ..."

9. Biographical and Critical Essays: Reprinted from Reviews, with Additions and by Abraham Hayward (1873)
"Lea salons de Paris: Foyers ... of the books which we propose to use as the text-books of this article : ' When we speak of salons,'' says Madame Ancelot, ..."

10. The French Court and Society: Reign of Louis XVI and First Empire by Catherine Charlotte Jackson (1881)
"HE Parisian salons of the reign of Louis XV. enjoyed a so widespread celebrity ... But in 1776 those salons for the most part were either wholly extinct,—as ..."

11. The Canadian Monthly and National Review by William White (1873)
"salons. The following Selection is from a volume of Essays by Mr. Hayward, QC, well known as the translator of "Faust," but still better known in the social ..."

12. A History of English Dramatic Literature to the Death of Queen Anne by Adolphus William Ward (1899)
"The salons Nowhere was the determination to take refuge in an imaginary world, and through this medium to view the actual, more likely to assert itself than ..."

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