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''triptych'' ▫ᴱᴺ|Definition|1st|20260218114101-00-⌔

triptych - Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Noun

triptych (plural triptychs)

  • (art) A picture or series of pictures painted on three tablets connected by hinges.
    • ✤ Hypernym: panel painting
    • ✤ Meronym: volet
    • I never thought breastfeeding would be hard. When I thought about it at all, my mind conjured beatific scenes suffused with a sort of religious glow. […] These days I envisage more of a triptych: the infant Jesus spluttering at the breast, face purple with hangry fury; the infant Jesus possetting milk down Mary’s front; the infant Jesus and the nappy explosion.1
  • (by extension) A group of three people or works, especially when considered representative of a particular field or theme.
    • Thus, with the passing years, Papa Wemba, a hardworking and introverted man, has come to embody “African pop,” forming a triptych with Youssou N’Dour and Salif Keita.2
    • Woodson, the recipient of four Newbery Honor awards, has written her first adult novel in 20 years, returning to the Brooklyn setting of “Autobiography of a Family Photo” (1995) and her recent award-winning memoir, “Brown Girl Dreaming.” These works form a triptych of bildungsromans taking place in the author’s hometown and tracking her generation’s coming to adulthood.3
    • The show was the first in a triptych of excellent Australian dramas produced by John Edwards that tapped into the sensibility of a generation. It was followed by the thirtysomething drama, Love My Way, and Tangle, which focused on fortysomethings.4
    • (film) A film or video sequence intended to be shown on a triple screen with the use of linked projectors.
      • The centerpiece of the show is a poised, luminous, tender, and diabolically clever video installation, “Le Triptyque de Noirmoutier” (The Noirmoutier Triptych), which Varda shot on 35-mm. film […]. The man gets himself a bottle of beer; the older woman heads with dishes from the sink toward the cupboard—and crosses the dividing line of the triptych exactly like crossing a threshold.5
    • (philately) A set of three se-tenant postage stamps that form a composite picture.
  • (figurative) Any set of three closely connected ideas or objects.
    • Witchcraft, heresy, and counterfeiting formed a triptych in popular imagination and in the law.6
    • The interest here is […] to construct for heuristic purposes a triptych of different “roads to salvation” as reflected in domains of preaching of contemporary Egypt.7
    • There was nothing quite like Hanalei Bay, that great horseshoe of protected water fed by the thick artery of the Hanalei River and framed by a triptych of mountains.8

Etymology

From Ancient Greek τρίπτυχος (tríptukhos, “consisting of three layers, threefold”), from τρι- (tri-) + πτυχή (ptukhḗ, “a fold”).

Pronunciation

  • IPA: /ˈtɹɪp.tɪk/
  • Rhymes: -ɪptɪk
  • Audio (Southern England): 🔊
  • Homophones: tryptic, trip tic

Printed 2026-06-28.

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Footnotes

  1. 2022 May 9, Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, “Turns out breastfeeding really does hurt – why does no one tell you?”, in The New York Times:

  2. 2002, Frank Tenaille, translated by Steven Toussaint and Hope Sandrine, Music Is the Weapon of the Future: Fifty Years of African Popular Music, Chicago, IL: Lawrence Hill Books, →ISBN, page 183:

  3. 2016 August 18, Tayari Jones, “Jacqueline Woodson’s Adult Novel Captures 1970s Brooklyn”, in The New York Times:

  4. 2020 January 30, Brigid Delaney, “The Secret Life of Us broke the mould with its honest depiction of twentysomething culture”, in The Guardian:

  5. 2017 March 27, Richard Brody, “Agnès Varda’s Art of Being There”, in The New Yorker:

  6. 1994, John L. Brooke, The Refiner’s Fire: The Making of Mormon Cosmology, 1644–1844, →ISBN, page 115:

  7. 1994, Patrick D. Gaffney, The Prophet’s Pulpit: Islamic Preaching in Contemporary Egypt, →ISBN, page 36:

  8. 2017, Toby Neal, Wired Dawn, →ISBN:

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