Dresser vs Dressed - What's the difference?
dresser | dressed |
An item of kitchen furniture, like a cabinet with shelves, for storing crockery or utensils.
* 1847 , Longfellow,
* 1913 ,
An item of bedroom furniture, like a low chest of drawers, often with a mirror.
(dated) A table or bench on which meat and other things are dressed, or prepared for use.
(mining) A kind of pick for shaping large coal.
One who dresses in a particular way.
A wardrobe assistant in a theatre.
(medicine) A surgeon's assistant who helps to dress wounds etc.
* 1887 , Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, A Study in Scarlet , I:
(dress)
* 1883:
(New Orleans) Having a sandwich prepared with several fixings, typically lettuce, tomato, and mayonnaise.
As a noun dresser
is an item of kitchen furniture, like a cabinet with shelves, for storing crockery or utensils.As a verb dressed is
past tense of dress.dresser
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) dreceur, from the verb dresser.Noun
(en noun)- The pewter plates on the dresser / Caught and reflected the flame, as shields of armies the sunshine.
- But it went through her like a flash of hot fire when, in passing, he lurched against the dresser , setting the tins rattling, and clutched at the white pot knobs for support.
Etymology 2
From .Noun
(en noun)- He's a very snappy dresser .
- On the very day that I had come to this conclusion, I was standing at the Criterion Bar, when someone tapped me on the shoulder, and turning round I recognized young Stamford, who had been a dresser under me at Bart's.
Anagrams
* English agent nouns ----dressed
English
Verb
(head)- ...he was deadly pale, and the blood-stained bandage round his head told that he had recently been wounded, and still more recently dressed .