Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun A little castle.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun A little castle.

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

  • noun obsolete A little castle.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Old French chastelet, diminutive of chastel. Compare castle.

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Examples

  • My Fair Lady until Jan. 2; www.chatelet-theatre.com

    Christmas Gifts From Paris Judy Fayard 2010

  • A walk round the ramparts reveals an endless series of picturesque groupings of the old houses with their time-worn stone walls, over which tower the chatelet and La Merveille.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Complete Gordon Home 1923

  • A walk round the ramparts reveals an endless series of picturesque groupings of the old houses with their time-worn stone walls, over which tower the chatelet and La Merveille.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Part 3 Gordon Home 1923

  • They contained the entrance to the abbey before the chatelet made its appearance.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Complete Gordon Home 1923

  • They contained the entrance to the abbey before the chatelet made its appearance.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Part 3 Gordon Home 1923

  • Toustain came Pierre le Roy who built a tower behind Belle-Chaise and also the imposing-looking chatelet which contains the main entrance to the whole buildings.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Complete Gordon Home 1923

  • Here, beneath the great archway of the chatelet, sits an old blind woman who is almost as permanent a feature as the masonry on which she sits.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Part 3 Gordon Home 1923

  • Here, beneath the great archway of the chatelet, sits an old blind woman who is almost as permanent a feature as the masonry on which she sits.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Complete Gordon Home 1923

  • Toustain came Pierre le Roy who built a tower behind Belle-Chaise and also the imposing-looking chatelet which contains the main entrance to the whole buildings.

    Normandy, Illustrated, Part 3 Gordon Home 1923

  • You will know what a chatelet is when you meet another; it frowns in a spirit quite alien to the twelfth century; it jars on the religion of the place; it forebodes wars of religion; dissolution of society; loss of unity; the end of a world.

    Mont-Saint-Michel and Chartres Henry Adams 1878

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