From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishfestoonfes‧toon1 /feˈstuːn/ verb [transitive usually passive] DECORATEto cover something with flowers, long pieces of material etc, especially for decorationbe festooned with/in something Malaga was festooned with banners and flags in honour of the king’s visit.Grammar Festoon is usually passive.→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
festoon• They felt free to festoon the machine with all sorts of loony filigrees.• The Sons can otherwise festoon their cars with rebel flags.be festooned with/in something• The entire vehicle was festooned with a bewildering array of kit.• Vehicles and people both were festooned with banana leaves-symbol of rejoicing and fertility, I later learned.• The room was festooned with cobwebs, the air musty and thick with dust and disuse.• The house is festooned with everything from the snarling Rex to corpses rising out of the lawn.• Doors and chimneys are festooned with garlands of garlic.• The hills themselves are festooned with pylons and wires.• Every settlement on the line of march was festooned with the national colors.• Imprinted with cell bars, the first Tricky Envelope was meant to be festooned with the Richard Nixon stamp.festoonfestoon2 noun [countable] formal DECORATEa long thin piece of material, flowers etc, used especially for decorationExamples from the Corpus
festoon• All the decorations were white and festoons of snowy lace-gushed from every appropriate appointment.• I was used to riding with my reins hanging in festoons.• No footmarks disturbed the dust, cobwebs hung like festoons and a strange musty smell pervaded the atmosphere.• Ruched or festoons could add style to the setting.• Decorative effects Mains-voltage festoon lights are ideal for stringing decoratively through the branches of a tree.Origin festoon2 (1600-1700) French feston, from Latin festum; → FESTIVE