All canopy synonyms
can·o·py
C c noun canopy
- umbrella — a light, small, portable, usually circular cover for protection from rain or sun, consisting of a fabric held on a collapsible frame of thin ribs radiating from the top of a carrying stick or handle.
- marquee — a tall rooflike projection above a theater entrance, usually containing the name of a currently featured play or film and its stars.
- cover — If you cover something, you place something else over it in order to protect it, hide it, or close it.
- shade — the comparative darkness caused by the interception or screening of rays of light from an object, place, or area.
- awning — An awning is a piece of material attached to a caravan or building which provides shelter from the rain or sun.
- sunshade — something used as a protection from the rays of the sun, as an awning or a parasol.
- baldachin — a richly ornamented silk and gold brocade
- covering — A covering is a layer of something that protects or hides something else.
- shelter — something beneath, behind, or within which a person, animal, or thing is protected from storms, missiles, adverse conditions, etc.; refuge.
- blind — Someone who is blind is unable to see because their eyes are damaged.
- top — Technical/Office Protocol
- crown — A crown is a circular ornament, usually made of gold and jewels, which a king or queen wears on their head at official ceremonies. You can also use crown to refer to anything circular that is worn on someone's head.
- roof — the external upper covering of a house or other building.
verb canopy
- overspread — to spread or diffuse over: A blush of embarrassment overspread his face.
- mantling — a loose, sleeveless cloak or cape.
- layered — a thickness of some material laid on or spread over a surface: a layer of soot on the window sill; two layers of paint.
- carpeting — You use carpeting to refer to a carpet, or to the type of material that is used to make carpets.
- cover up — If you cover something or someone up, you put something over them in order to protect or hide them.
- set on — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
- shrouded — a cloth or sheet in which a corpse is wrapped for burial.
- superpose — to place above or upon something else, or one upon another.