| a children's mummer's parade, as on the Fourth of July, with prizes for the best costumes. |
| a fool or simpleton; ninny. |
bed (bɛd) ![]() | |
| —n | |
| 1. | a piece of furniture on which to sleep |
| 2. | the mattress and bedclothes on such a piece of furniture: an unmade bed |
| 3. | sleep or rest: time for bed |
| 4. | any place in which a person or animal sleeps or rests |
| 5. | med a unit of potential occupancy in a hospital or residential institution |
| 6. | informal a place for sexual intercourse |
| 7. | informal sexual intercourse |
| 8. | a plot of ground in which plants are grown, esp when considered together with the plants in it: a flower bed |
| 9. | the bottom of a river, lake, or sea |
| 10. | a part of this used for cultivation of a plant or animal: oyster beds |
| 11. | a layer of crushed rock, gravel, etc, used as a foundation for a road, railway, etc |
| 12. | a layer of mortar in a masonry wall |
| 13. | Compare back the underside of a brick, tile, slate, etc, when in position |
| 14. | any underlying structure or part |
| 15. | a layer of rock, esp sedimentary rock |
| 16. | the flat part of a letterpress printing press onto or against which the type forme is placed |
| 17. | a layer of solid particles of an absorbent, catalyst, or reagent through which a fluid is passed during the course of a chemical reaction or other process |
| 18. | a machine base on which a moving part carrying a tool or workpiece slides: lathe bed |
| 19. | a bed of roses a situation of comfort or ease |
| 20. | archaic to be brought to bed to give birth (to) |
| 21. | bed of nails |
| a. a situation or position of extreme difficulty | |
| b. a bed studded with nails on which a fakir lies | |
| 22. | informal get out of bed on the wrong side to be ill-tempered from the start of the day |
| 23. | go to bed |
| a. ( | |
| b. journalism, printing (of a newspaper, magazine, etc) to go to press; start printing | |
| 24. | informal in bed with cooperating closely with (another person, organization, government, etc.) esp covertly |
| 25. | put to bed |
| a. journalism to finalize work on (a newspaper, magazine, etc) so that it is ready to go to press | |
| b. printing to lock up the type forme of (a publication) in the press before printing | |
| 26. | take to one's bed to remain in bed, esp because of illness |
| —vb (often foll by out) , beds, bedding, bedded | |
| 27. | ( |
| 28. | (tr) to have sexual intercourse with |
| 29. | (tr) to place, fix, or sink firmly into position; embed |
| 30. | geology to form or be arranged in a distinct layer; stratify |
| 31. | to plant in a bed of soil |
| [Old English bedd; related to Old Norse bethr, Old High German betti, Gothic badi] | |
| BEd | |
| —abbreviation for | |
| Bachelor of Education | |
bed (běd)
n.
A piece of furniture for reclining and sleeping, typically consisting of a flat, rectangular frame and a mattress resting on springs.
Such a piece of furniture used for rest, recuperation, or treatment.
A supporting, underlying, or securing base or structure, especially an anatomical one.
bed (běd) Pronunciation Key
|
| BEd Bachelor of Education |
(Heb. mittah), for rest at night (Ex. 8:3; 1 Sam. 19:13, 15, 16, etc.); during sickness (Gen. 47:31; 48:2; 49:33, etc.); as a sofa for rest (1 Sam. 28:23; Amos 3:12). Another Hebrew word (er'es) so rendered denotes a canopied bed, or a bed with curtains (Deut. 3:11; Ps. 132:3), for sickness (Ps. 6:6; 41:3). In the New Testament it denotes sometimes a litter with a coverlet (Matt. 9:2, 6; Luke 5:18; Acts 5:15). The Jewish bedstead was frequently merely the divan or platform along the sides of the house, sometimes a very slight portable frame, sometimes only a mat or one or more quilts. The only material for bed-clothes is mentioned in 1 Sam. 19:13. Sleeping in the open air was not uncommon, the sleeper wrapping himself in his outer garment (Ex. 22:26,27; Deut. 24:12,13).
put to bed
Complete something and either set it aside or send it on to the next step, as in We put the magazine to bed at ten, or They said they'd put the whole project to bed at least a month ago. This expression, transferring nighttime retirement to other kinds of completion, was first applied to a newspaper, where it meant "send to press," that is, start to print. [Mid-1900s]