Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of stucco.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • As lime-based paints and stuccoes are compatible with stone walls, cal (lime) - based recipes encourage walls to “breathe,” allowing moisture to escape without damaging painted surfaces.

    Mexican Design & Style: Overview 2007

  • As lime-based paints and stuccoes are compatible with stone walls, cal (lime) - based recipes encourage walls to “breathe,” allowing moisture to escape without damaging painted surfaces.

    Mexican Design & Style: Overview 2007

  • As lime-based paints and stuccoes are compatible with stone walls, cal (lime) - based recipes encourage walls to “breathe,” allowing moisture to escape without damaging painted surfaces.

    Mexican Design & Style: Overview 2007

  • As lime-based paints and stuccoes are compatible with stone walls, cal (lime) - based recipes encourage walls to “breathe,” allowing moisture to escape without damaging painted surfaces.

    Mexican Design & Style: Overview 2007

  • I know a great deal on this subject as well as sgraffito, fresco and other decorative plasters/stuccoes.

    Tirol / Estuco (Stucco) 2002

  • : The old stuccoes of Europe and Mexican colonial periods were all based on lime.

    Tirol / Estuco (Stucco) 2002

  • I know a great deal on this subject as well as sgraffito, fresco and other decorative plasters/stuccoes.

    Tirol / Estuco (Stucco) 2002

  • The old stuccoes of Europe and Mexican colonial periods were all based on lime.

    Tirol / Estuco (Stucco) 2002

  • Ripa's Iconologia was the great source book for baroque artists, some of whose works — like the stuccoes of Serpotta in Palermo — would be impossible to interpret without the help of the emblem books.

    Dictionary of the History of Ideas HELEN F. NORTH 1968

  • Then comes an enormous dining-hall, the coved ceiling of which, supported by noble pillars and ornamented with stuccoes in relief, is in perfect keeping with the style of the rest of the ornamentation.

    Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Volume 17, No. 097, January, 1876 Various

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