English edit

 
Ice-cream chairs next to a woodstove in a country store.

Etymology edit

From the use of this type of chair in ice cream parlors.

Noun edit

ice-cream chair (plural ice-cream chairs)

  1. A lightweight armless chair with a circular seat and wire back.
    • 1985, Marshall B. Davidson, Elizabeth Stillinger, The American Wing at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, page 186:
      Another innovative metal form was the “ice-cream” chair, so called because its portability and inexpensiveness made it practical for use in luncheonettes and ice-cream parlors everywhere.
    • 2008, Joe Coomer, One Vacant Chair: A Novel, page 55:
      I'd worn a pale yellow blouse and skirt for Grandma's service and now I looked like a Neiman-Marcus sack that had been dragged ostentatiously around the rest of the mall, stuffed with items from Women's Tall & Oversize, crumpled into an ice-cream chair at the food court, and dipped into a fountain while searching for pennies to throw.
    • 2012, Georgette Beck, The Song of Sylvania Square, page 26:
      At the small table he grasps its matching ice-cream chair opposite Cossetti's, sits and palms a worn deck of cards.