Search for crossword answers and clues

Answer for the clue "Bed in a dorm room, maybe ", 5 letters:
futon

Alternative clues for the word futon

Word definitions for futon in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
1876, from Japanese, said to mean "bedroll" or "place to rest."

Usage examples of futon.

Setting her valise at the back of the closet, she closed the door and glanced at the futon lying under the window.

The clean smell of the room, as though the futon and pillow were stuffed with lemon balm.

She loved the firmness of the futon, the way you could turn over on it without making a bedspring creak, because there was no box spring underneath, only the floor.

Reduced to sleeping in a junked car when she could have been sharing the futon back in the apartment on Stanton Street.

He saw that housekeeping had laid out the futon bed on the floor of the Japanese room.

He thought about his Futon Mouth Futon, down in Mar Vista, and actually felt homesick.

His wife runs the futon business now, which has so far managed to hover above bankruptcy.

She removed his shirt, his slacks, and then they clung together on the futon, his lips kissing hers.

Moonlight streamed through the window, illuminating two nude figures entwined on the futon, and an item that lay amid scattered clothing.

He retired to his bedchamber, where the futon, piled with soft quilts, offered an irresistible invitation to rest.

Eschewing the futon, he lay on the floor with his neck propped on a wooden headrest.

He pushed Jennifer off the right side of their futon and rolled to the left as a bullet seared his side and another ripped through his upper thigh.

Bullets had stitched the walls, smashing the framed Hokusai and Yoshitosi woodblocks hanging over the futon where Jennifer lay quiet and still as death, awash in a sea of blood.

And there was a large black futon on the floor to the rear of the cabin.

In these wild regions there are no kago or norimons to be had, and a pack-horse is the only conveyance, and yesterday, having abandoned my own saddle, I had the bad luck to get a pack-saddle with specially angular and uncompromising peaks, with a soaked and extremely unwashed futon on the top, spars, tackle, ridges, and furrows of the most exasperating description, and two nooses of rope to hold on by as the animal slid down hill on his haunches, or let me almost slide over his tail as he scrambled and plunged up hill.