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Crossword clues for housecoat

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
housecoat
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Mrs Sweet stood up and stripped off the housecoat.
▪ She felt hot and sticky and changed her clothes and put on a housecoat.
▪ She is a pretty, older woman dressed in a flowery silk housecoat.
▪ She rose late and was still in a négligé and housecoat.
▪ She stood there in the doorway, wearing a loose blue housecoat.
▪ She was wearing a housecoat and slippers.
▪ She was wearing a quilted housecoat, and in her hand was a hairdryer.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
housecoat

housecoat \housecoat\ n. a loose dressing gown for women.

Syn: negligee, neglige, peignoir, wrapper.

Wiktionary
housecoat

alt. (context US Canada English) A bathrobe. n. (context US Canada English) A bathrobe.

WordNet
housecoat

n. a loose dressing gown for women [syn: negligee, neglige, peignoir, wrapper]

Usage examples of "housecoat".

The rider was an old woman dressed in a velvet housecoat the color of oxblood, a woolen throw draped across her lap for extra warmth.

Without a further thought on the matter I put on my housecoat and slippers and struck out toward the ash grove.

He went to work in his Uncle Benjy's dress factory for sixteen dollars a week, and there he sat at the end of a long table where twelve French-Canadian girls, wearing flowered housecoats over their dresses, sewed belts in the heat and dust.

She had started their relationship wearing ratty housecoats, but had quickly learned how he liked to be greeted—by an actual woman, not a housekeeper.

Women wear all sorts of garments when they want to be comfortable -- magnificently cut housecoats, kimonos, flannel dressing gowns, and even old bathrobes which their husbands have discarded as unfit for further service -- but they never wear those tight-fitting things with lace skirts split up the front, for the good reason that it is impossible to sit down in one, much less perform any of the feats appropriate to negligees.

She who had come to the breakfast table at eight o'clock fully dressed for the day, whose immaculate, unwrinkled housecoats at home in the evening had always matched her slippers, whose modesty about her body—well, the less about her modesty, the better—had had to lie like that!

She was a woman, dressed in a thin housecoat, preparing to leap from the end of a pier -- name, Lois Voorhies, lay analyst.