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View synonyms for dress

dress

[ dres ]

noun

  1. an outer garment for women and girls, consisting of bodice and skirt in one piece.

    Synonyms: frock

  2. clothing; apparel; garb:

    The dress of the 18th century was colorful.

    Synonyms: habiliments, vestments, garments, habit, clothes, attire, raiment

  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 (Obsolete) drest, dress·ing.
  1. to put clothing upon.

    Synonyms: garb, robe, clothe

  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 (Obsolete,) 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 phrase

    1. to reprimand; scold.
    2. to thrash; beat.
    3. to dress informally or less formally:

      to dress down for the shipboard luau.

    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.

dress

/ drɛs /

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. archaic.
    tr 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
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


noun

  1. a one-piece garment for a woman, consisting of a skirt and bodice
  2. complete style of clothing; costume

    formal dress

    military dress

  3. modifier suitable or required for a formal occasion

    a dress shirt

  4. the outer covering or appearance, esp of living things

    trees in their spring dress of leaves

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Other Words From

  • half-dressed adjective
  • outdress verb (used with object)
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Word History and Origins

Origin of dress1

First recorded in 1275–1325; Middle English dressen, from Anglo-French dresser, dresc(i)er, “to arrange, prepare,” Old French drecier, from unattested Vulgar Latin dīrēctiāre, derivative of Latin dīrēctus direct; noun use of verb in sense “attire” from circa 1600
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Word History and Origins

Origin of dress1

C14: from Old French drecier, ultimately from Latin dīrigere to direct
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Idioms and Phrases

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.
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Synonym Study

Dress, costume, gown refer to garments for women. Dress is the general term for a garment: a black dress. Costume is used of the style of dress appropriate to some occasion, purpose, period, or character, especially as used on the stage, at balls, at court, or the like, and may apply to men's garments as well: an 18th-century costume. Gown is usually applied to a dress more expensive and elegant than the ordinary, usually long, to be worn on a special occasion: a wedding gown.
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Example Sentences

A dress would then show up at a customer’s home, she’d wear it for whatever occasion had brought her to the site to begin with, and then she’d ship the dress back when she was done with it.

From Fortune

The Swedish dress up like Swedish milkmaids and make a lot of noise.

From Eater

As if to underscore that the company does not plan to bend to convention even once public, Karp introduced Wednesday’s presentation dressed in cross country-training gear in a pre-recorded video.

From Fortune

In the end, the battalion rides to the emperor’s defense with Mulan openly in the lead, dressed as a woman.

From Vox

Being mistaken for the parking valet no matter how well one is dressed, or being wantonly stopped by the police are all too regular events for many.

From Fortune

And so, he says he left prison without proper ID, just his release papers and the “dress-out gear” he was given by the state.

Even for Arabic dance no one wears a long dress, just a scarf around the hips.

Families stuff a life-size male doll with memories of the outgoing year and dress him in their clothing.

“The dress is just fishnet and crystals and a couple fingers crossed,” Selman told Style.com of the dress.

The exhibit also includes examples of designers borrowing from fine art, as Yves Saint Laurent did with his Mondrian dress.

And she would be wearing some of the jewels with the white dress—just a few, not many, of course.

That poor, pretty creature, starving, in her charming pink dress and hat of roses.

Every time he is dressed, or sees his mother dress, he has an object-lesson in symmetrical arrangement.

She is always attired in black, and is utterly careless in dress, yet nothing can conceal her innate elegance of figure.

If she is so distingue in rather less than ordinary dress, what would she be in a Parisian costume?

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More About Dress

What does dress mean?

A dress is a piece of clothing made up of a blouse and skirt in one piece.

Dress can also refer to any formal attire, as in We’ve decided the wedding will be informal dress, with shorts and sneakers allowed.

Dress can refer to clothing in general, especially for a specific group of people or time period, as in Men’s dress from the 1800s included top hats and greatcoats.

To dress means to put clothes on or prepare for an event involving formal clothing, as in While pajamas are comfy, you do have to get dressed for school, you know.

As an adjective, dress almost always refers to clothes thought to be fancy or formal, such as dress pants or dress shoes. Fancy dress usually means a costume for a ball or masquerade, however.

Example: The event got cancelled right after I finished getting dressed for it.

Where does dress come from?

The first records of the verb dress come from the late 1200s. It comes from the

Old French drecier and may come from the Latin dīrēctus, meaning “direct.” The first records of the noun dress meaning “attire” come from the 1600s.

Dress usually refers to the one piece blouse-and-skirt item traditionally worn by girls and women, but it can also refer to many types of clothing such as costumes, disguises, uniforms, or outfits.

As a verb dress can also mean to prepare raw materials through several processes, such as turning lumber into treated wood or cotton into fabric. In the military, to dress can refer to straightening a line, and in medicine it can mean to treat a wound with cloth. In entertainment, to dress is to decorate a set or stage for actors to perform on.

Dressing something can mean completely different things, but all the definitions relate to direct or prepare, making dress a very useful term.

Did you know … ?

What are some other forms related to dress?

What are some synonyms for dress?

What are some words that share a root or word element with dress?

What are some words that often get used in discussing dress?

How is dress used in real life?

Dress is a very common word with many meanings.

 

Try using dress!

Is dress used correctly in the following sentence?

Val dressed for the first day of school in their favorite outfit.

Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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