Galician: rollo m, cadafalso m, patíbulo m.Italian: impalcatura (it) m, ponteggio (it) m.Icelandic: vinnupallur m, stillans m, reisipallur m.German: Gerüst (de) n, Baugerüst (de) n.Galician: estada (gl) f, andavía f, andamio (gl) m, bailéo m, taboado m.French: échafaudage (fr) m, échafaud (fr) m.A structure made of scaffolding for workers to stand on while working on a building.( General American ) IPA ( key): /ˈskæf.əld/, /ˈskæf.ld/. ( Received Pronunciation ) IPA ( key): /ˈskæf.əld/, /ˈskæf.əʊld/.Etymology įrom Middle English scaffold, scaffalde, from Anglo-Norman schaffaut, eschaffaut, eschafal, eschaiphal, escadafaut ( “ platform to see a tournament ” ) (Modern French échafaud), from Old French es- ( “ indicating movement away or separation ” ) (from Latin ex- ( “ out, away ” )) + chafaud, chafaut, chafault, caafau, caafaus, cadefaut ( “ scaffold for executing a criminal ” ), from Vulgar Latin *catafalcum ( “ viewing stage ” ), possibly from Ancient Greek κατα- ( kata-, “ back against ” ) + Latin -falicum (from fala, phala ( “ wooden gallery or tower siege tower ” )). Lacroix (wearing a hood), a priest, and the officials carrying out the execution are standing on a scaffold (sense 2). Scaffold Wikipedia All Saints Church in Lund, Sweden, covered in scaffolding (sense 1) in June 2009 A scaffold (sense 1) installed around the dome of the United States Capitol in July 2016 for restoration work The execution of Stanislaus Lacroix by hanging in Hull, Quebec, Canada, on 21 March 1902.
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