5 results for: Dressed
dress
Audio Help [dres] Pronunciation Key noun, adjective, verb, dressed or drest, dress·ing.
Audio Help [dres] Pronunciation Key noun, adjective, verb, dressed or drest, dress·ing. –noun
–adjective
–verb (used with object)
–verb (used without object)
—Verb phrases
—Idiom
| 1. | an outer garment for women and girls, consisting of bodice and skirt in one piece. |
| 2. | clothing; apparel; garb: The dress of the 18th century was colorful. |
| 3. | formal attire. |
| 4. | a particular form of appearance; guise. |
| 5. | outer covering, as the plumage of birds. |
| 6. | of or for a dress or dresses. |
| 7. | of or for a formal occasion. |
| 8. | requiring formal dress. |
| 9. | to put clothing upon. |
| 10. | to put formal or evening clothes on. |
| 11. | to trim; ornament; adorn: to dress a store window; to dress a Christmas tree. |
| 12. | to design clothing for or sell clothes to. |
| 13. | to comb out and do up (hair). |
| 14. | to cut up, trim, and remove the skin, feathers, viscera, etc., from (an animal, meat, fowl, or flesh of a fowl) for market or for cooking (often fol. by out when referring to a large animal): We dressed three chickens for the dinner. He dressed out the deer when he got back to camp. |
| 15. | to prepare (skins, fabrics, timber, stone, ore, etc.) by special processes. |
| 16. | to apply medication or a dressing to (a wound or sore). |
| 17. | to make straight; bring (troops) into line: to dress ranks. |
| 18. | to make (stone, wood, or other building material) smooth. |
| 19. | to cultivate (land, fields, etc.). |
| 20. | Theater. to arrange (a stage) by effective placement of properties, scenery, actors, etc. |
| 21. | to ornament (a vessel) with ensigns, house flags, code flags, etc.: The bark was dressed with masthead flags only. |
| 22. | Angling.
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| 23. | Printing. to fit (furniture) around and between pages in a chase prior to locking it up. |
| 24. | to supply with accessories, optional features, etc.: to have one's new car fully dressed. |
| 25. | to clothe or attire oneself; put on one's clothes: Wake up and dress, now! |
| 26. | to put on or wear formal or fancy clothes: to dress for dinner. |
| 27. | to come into line, as troops. |
| 28. | to align oneself with the next soldier, marcher, dancer, etc., in line. |
| 29. | dress down,
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| 30. | dress up,
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| 31. | dress ship,
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[Origin: 1275–1325; ME dressen < AF dresser, dresc(i)er, to arrange, prepare, OF drecier < VL *dīréctiāre, deriv. of L dīréctus direct; n. use of v. in sense “attire” from ca. 1600
]
] —Synonyms 1. frock. Dress, costume, gown refer to garments for women. Dress is the general term for a garment: a black dress. Costume is used of the style of dress appropriate to some occasion, purpose, period, or character, esp. as used on the stage, at balls, at court, or the like, and may apply to men's garments as well: an 18th-century costume. Gown is usually applied to a dress more expensive and elegant than the ordinary, usually long, to be worn on a special occasion: a wedding gown. 2. raiment, attire, clothes, habit, garments, vestments, habiliments. 9. clothe, robe, garb.
| Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1) Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. |
Dressed
To learn more about Dressed visit Britannica.com
| © 2008 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. |
| dress
Audio Help (drěs) Pronunciation Key
v. dressed, dress·ing, dress·es v. tr.
v. intr.
n.
adj.
Phrasal Verb(s): dress down
To wear formal or fancy clothes: They dressed up and went to the prom. Idiom(s): dress ship Nautical To display the ensign, signal flags, and bunting on a ship. [Middle English dressen, to arrange, put on clothing, from Old French drecier, to arrange, from Vulgar Latin *dīrēctiāre, from Latin dīrēctus, past participle of dīrigere, to direct; see direct.] Word History: A dress is such a common article of modern attire that it is difficult to imagine that the word dress has not always referred to this garment. The earliest noun sense of dress, recorded in a work written before 1450, was "speech, talk." This dress comes from the verb dress, which goes back through Old French drecier, "to arrange," and the assumed Vulgar Latin *dīrēctiāre to Latin dīrēctus, a form of the verb dīrigere, "to direct." In accordance with its etymology, the verb dress has meant and still means "to place," "to arrange," and "to put in order." The sense "to clothe" is related to the notion of putting in order, specifically in regard to clothing. This verb sense then gave rise to the noun sense "personal attire" as well as to the specific garment sense. The earliest noun sense, "speech," comes from a verb sense having to do with addressing or directing words to other people. |
| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
| dressed | |
adjective | |
| 1. | dressed or clothed especially in fine attire; often used in combination; "the elegantly attired gentleman"; "neatly dressed workers"; "monks garbed in hooded robes"; "went about oddly garmented"; "professors robed in crimson"; "tuxedo-attired gentlemen"; "crimson-robed Harvard professors" [syn: appareled] |
| 2. | treated with medications and protective covering |
| 3. | (of lumber or stone) to trim and smooth |
| 4. | dressed in fancy or formal clothing |
| WordNet® 3.0, © 2006 by Princeton University. |
dressed adjective
wearing (clothes)
Example: Don't come in — I'm not dressed!; She was dressed in black; Get dressed immediately; a well-dressed man
See also: dress, dress rehearsal, dress up, dresser, dressing, dressing-gown, dressing-room, dressing-table, dressmakerExample: Don't come in — I'm not dressed!; She was dressed in black; Get dressed immediately; a well-dressed man
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| Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary (Beta Version), © 2000-2006 K Dictionaries Ltd. |
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