English
Etymology
From dressing + gown.
Pronunciation
Noun
dressing gown (plural dressing gowns)
- (UK, Ireland) An item of clothing often made from cotton or another absorbent material, in the form of a long open robe with a belt to tie it around the middle and fasten it securely; often worn over pyjamas.
1891, Oscar Wilde, chapter VIII, in The Picture of Dorian Gray, London, New York, N.Y., Melbourne, Vic.: Ward Lock & Co., →OCLC, page 138:After about ten minutes he got up, and, throwing on an elaborate dressing-gown of silk-embroidered cashmere wool, passed into the onyx-paved bathroom.
1960, P[elham] G[renville] Wodehouse, “VII AND XX”, in Jeeves in the Offing, London: Herbert Jenkins, →OCLC:I was feeling just as I had felt in the old Malvern House epoch when I used to sneak down to [the headmaster]'s study at dead of night in quest of the biscuits he kept there in a tin on his desk, and there came back to me the memory of the occasion when, not letting a twig snap beneath my feet, I had entered his sanctum in pyjamas and a dressing-gown, to find him seated in his chair, tucking into the biscuits himself. [...] She was looking more like Sherlock Holmes than ever. Slap a dressing-gown on her and give her a violin, and she could have walked straight into Baker Street and no questions asked.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
item of clothing
- Albanian: robdëshambër m
- Arabic: رُوب m (rōb), ثَوْب نَوْم m (ṯawb nawm), رُوب دُو شَامْبْر m (rōb do šāmbr), رِدَاء نَوْم m (ridāʔ nawm)
- Armenian: խալաթ (hy) (xalatʻ)
- Azerbaijani: xələt
- Belarusian: хала́т m (xalát)
- Bulgarian: хала́т (bg) m (halát), пеньоа́р (bg) m (penjoár)
- Catalan: batí (ca) m, bata (ca) f
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 晨衣 (zh) (chényī)
- Czech: župan (cs) m
- Danish: morgenkåbe c, slåbrok c
- Dutch: kamerjas (nl) m
- Esperanto: noktosurtuto, negliĝo, ĥalato
- Estonian: hommikumantel
- Finnish: aamutakki (fi)
- French: robe de chambre (fr) f, peignoir (fr) m
- Georgian: ხალათი (ka) (xalati)
- German: Bademantel (de) m
- Greek: ρόμπα (el) f (rómpa)
- Ancient: περιβόλαιον n (peribólaion)
- Hungarian: hálóköntös (hu), köntös (hu), pongyola (hu)
- Icelandic: baðsloppur m
- Irish: fallaing sheomra f
- Italian: vestaglia (it) f
- Japanese: ガウン (ja) (gaun), 部屋着 (ja) (へやぎ, heyagi), バスローブ (ja) (basurōbu) (bathrobe)
- Kazakh: халат (xalat)
- Korean: 가운 (ko) (gaun), 실내복(室內服) (ko) (sillaebok)
- Kyrgyz: халат (ky) (halat)
- Latvian: halāts m
- Lithuanian: chalatas m
- Macedonian: пењоа́р m (penjoár)
- Maltese: libsa tal-banju
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: morgenkåpe (no) m or f, slåbrok (no) m
- Nynorsk: morgonkåpe f
- Ottoman Turkish: مفضل (mifzal)
- Persian: رب دشامبر (fa) (rob do-šâmbr), ربدشامبر (fa) (rob-do-šâmbr)
- Polish: szlafrok (pl) m, podomka (pl) f
- Portuguese: roupão (pt) m, robe (pt) m
- Romanian: halat (ro) n
- Russian: хала́т (ru) m (xalát), пеньюа́р (ru) m (penʹjuár)
- Scottish Gaelic: còta-leapa m
- Slovak: župan m
- Slovene: jutranja halja f
- Spanish: batín m, bata (es) f
- Swedish: morgonrock (sv) c
- Tajik: хилъат (xil'at), халат (xalat), ҷомаи хонагӣ (joma-yi xonagi)
- Thai: เสื้อคลุม (sʉ̂ʉa-klum), (bathrobe) เสื้อคลุมอาบน้ำ (sʉ̂ʉa-klum-àap-náam)
- Turkish: ropdöşambır (tr)
- Ukrainian: хала́т m (xalát)
- Uzbek: xalat (uz)
- Welsh: gŵn llofft m, gŵn tŷ m
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