erect leafless flower stalk growing directly from the ground as in a tulip
<noun.plant>
(architecture) upright consisting of the vertical part of a column
<noun.artifact>
Scape \Scape\, v. t. & i. [imp. & p. p. {Scaped}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Scaping}.] [Aphetic form of escape.] To escape. [Obs. or Poetic.] --Milton.
Out of this prison help that we may scape. --Chaucer.
Scape \Scape\, n. 1. An escape. [Obs.]
I spake of most disastrous chances, . . . Of hairbreadth scapes in the imminent, deadly breach. --Shak.
2. Means of escape; evasion. [Obs.] --Donne.
3. A freak; a slip; a fault; an escapade. [Obs.]
Not pardoning so much as the scapes of error and ignorance. --Milton.
4. Loose act of vice or lewdness. [Obs.] --Shak.
Scape \Scape\, n. [L. scapus shaft, stem, stalk; cf. Gr. ? a staff: cf. F. scape. Cf. {Scepter}.] 1. (Bot.) A peduncle rising from the ground or from a subterranean stem, as in the stemless violets, the bloodroot, and the like.
2. (Zo["o]l.) The long basal joint of the antenn[ae] of an insect.
3. (Arch.) (a) The shaft of a column. (b) The apophyge of a shaft.
Apophyge \A*poph"y*ge\, n. [Gr. 'apofygh` escape, in arch. the curve with which the shaft escapes into its base or capital, fr. 'apofey`gein to flee away; 'apo` from + fey`gein to flee: cf. F. apophyge.] (Arch.) The small hollow curvature given to the top or bottom of the shaft of a column where it expands to meet the edge of the fillet; -- called also the {scape}. --Parker.
This attraction is unlike anything else we have." It's all themed to the golden age of Hollywood in the 1930s and 1940s, when tyrannical cigar-chomping moguls ran studios and art deco dominated the building scape.