Noun
piazza (plural piazzas or piazze)
- A public square, especially in Italian cities.
2021 December 1, Nigel Harris, “St Pancras and King's Cross: 1947”, in RAIL, number 945, page 43:Incidentally, the yard in front of the Granary, now a lovely piazza, was once a canal basin that had been filled in decades before.
- (US dialects, especially New England, dated) A veranda; a porch.
1913, Joseph C[rosby] Lincoln, chapter I, in Mr. Pratt’s Patients, New York, N.Y., London: D[aniel] Appleton and Company, →OCLC:Pretty soon I struck into a sort of path […]. It twisted and turned, […] and opened out into a big clear space like a lawn. And, back of the lawn, was a big, old-fashioned house, with piazzas stretching in front of it, and all blazing with lights.
- (UK) A roofed gallery or arcade (for example around a public square or in front of a building).
Usage notes
- The plural piazze is used especially when the word refers to public squares in Italy, and plural piazzas when it refers to porches.
- In some Southern dialects, the variant form pizer is used.