half-dressed









half-dressed


noun

  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.

adjective

  1. of or for a dress or dresses.
  2. of or for a formal occasion.
  3. requiring formal dress.

verb (used with object), dressed or drest, dress·ing.

  1. to put clothing upon.
  2. to put formal or evening clothes on.
  3. to trim; ornament; adorn: to dress a store window; to dress a Christmas tree.
  4. to design clothing for or sell clothes to.
  5. to comb out and do up (hair).
  6. 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 followed 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.
  7. to prepare (skins, fabrics, timber, stone, ore, etc.) by special processes.
  8. to apply medication or a dressing to (a wound or sore).
  9. to make straight; bring (troops) into line: to dress ranks.
  10. to make (stone, wood, or other building material) smooth.
  11. to cultivate (land, fields, etc.).
  12. Theater. to arrange (a stage) by effective placement of properties, scenery, actors, etc.
  13. to ornament (a vessel) with ensigns, house flags, code flags, etc.: The bark was dressed with masthead flags only.
  14. Angling.
    1. to prepare or bait (a fishhook) for use.
    2. to prepare (bait, especially an artificial fly) for use.
  15. Printing. to fit (furniture) around and between pages in a chase prior to locking it up.
  16. to supply with accessories, optional features, etc.: to have one’s new car fully dressed.

verb (used without object), dressed or drest, dress·ing.

  1. to clothe or attire oneself; put on one’s clothes: Wake up and dress, now!
  2. to put on or wear formal or fancy clothes: to dress for dinner.
  3. to come into line, as troops.
  4. to align oneself with the next soldier, marcher, dancer, etc., in line.

Verb Phrases

  1. dress down,
    1. to reprimand; scold.
    2. to thrash; beat.
    3. to dress informally or less formally: to dress down for the shipboard luau.
  2. dress up,
    1. to put on one’s best or fanciest clothing; dress relatively formally: They were dressed up for the Easter parade.
    2. to dress in costume or in another person’s clothes: to dress up in Victorian clothing; to dress up as Marie Antoinette.
    3. to embellish or disguise, especially in order to make more appealing or acceptable: to dress up the facts with colorful details.
Idioms

  1. dress ship,
    1. to decorate a ship by hoisting lines of flags running its full length.
    2. U.S. Navy.to display the national ensigns at each masthead and a larger ensign on the flagstaff.

adjective

  1. partially clothed

verb

  1. to put clothes on (oneself or another); attire
  2. (intr)
    1. to change one’s clothes
    2. to wear formal or evening clothes
  3. (tr) to provide (someone) with clothing; clothe
  4. (tr) to arrange merchandise in (a shop window) for effective display
  5. (tr) to comb out or arrange (the hair) into position
  6. (tr) to apply protective or therapeutic covering to (a wound, sore, etc)
  7. (tr) to prepare (food, esp fowl and fish) for cooking or serving by cleaning, trimming, gutting, etc
  8. (tr) to put a finish on (the surface of stone, metal, etc)
  9. (tr) to till and cultivate (land), esp by applying manure, compost, or fertilizer
  10. (tr) to prune and trim (trees, bushes, etc)
  11. (tr) to groom (an animal, esp a horse)
  12. (tr) to convert (tanned hides) into leather
  13. (tr) archaic to spay or neuter (an animal)
  14. angling to tie (a fly)
  15. military to bring (troops) into line or (of troops) to come into line (esp in the phrase dress ranks)
  16. dress ship nautical to decorate a vessel by displaying all signal flags on lines run from the bow to the stern over the mast trucks

noun

  1. a one-piece garment for a woman, consisting of a skirt and bodice
  2. complete style of clothing; costumeformal dress; military dress
  3. (modifier) suitable or required for a formal occasiona dress shirt
  4. the outer covering or appearance, esp of living thingstrees in their spring dress of leaves
v.

early 14c., “make straight; direct, guide, control, prepare for cooking,” from Old French dresser, drecier “raise (oneself), address, prepare, lift, raise, hoist, set up, arrange, set (a table), serve (food), straighten, put right, direct,” from Vulgar Latin *directiare, from Latin directus “direct, straight” (see direct (v.)).

Sense of “decorate, adorn” is late 14c., as is that of “put on clothing.” Original sense survives in military meaning “align columns of troops.” Dress up “attire elaborately” is from 1670s; dressing down “wearing clothes less formal than expected” is from 1960. To dress (someone) down (1769) is ironical. Related: Dressed; dressing.

n.

c.1600, originally any clothing, especially that appropriate to rank or to some ceremony; sense of “woman’s garment” is first recorded 1630s, with overtones of “made not merely to clothe but to adorn.” Dress rehearsal first recorded 1828.

v.

  1. To apply medication, bandages, or other therapeutic materials to an area of the body such as a wound.
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