night-dress

See also: nightdress

English

Noun

night-dress (plural night-dresses)

  1. Archaic form of nightdress.
    • 1847 January – 1848 July, William Makepeace Thackeray, “Vauxhall”, in Vanity Fair [], London: Bradbury and Evans [], published 1848, →OCLC, page 43:
      Or if, on the contrary, we had taken a fancy for the terrible, and made the lover of the new femme de chambre a professional burglar, who bursts into the house with his band, slaughters black Sambo at the feet of his master, and carries off Amelia in her night-dress, not to be let loose again till the third volume, we should easily have constructed a tale of thrilling interest, through the fiery chapters of which the reader should hurry, panting.
    • 1889 December, H[enry] Rider Haggard, “[Allan’s Wife] Hendrika Plots Evil”, in Allan’s Wife and Other Tales, London: Spencer Blackett, [], →OCLC, page 163:
      [] You were very nearly dead to-night, Macumazahn.” / “Very nearly, indeed,” I answered, still panting, and arranging the rags of my night-dress round me as best I might.
    • 1893, A[rthur] Conan Doyle, “A Monarch in Déshabille”, in The Refugees: A Tale of Two Continents, volume I, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., →OCLC, [part I (In the Old World)], pages 28–29:
      Then, with a nod to his brother and a short word of greeting to the dauphin and to the Duc du Maine, he swung his legs over the side of the bed, and sat in his long silken night-dress, his little white feet dangling from beneath it—a perilous position for any man to assume, were it not that he had so heart-felt a sense of his own dignity that he could not realise that under any circumstances it might be compromised in the eyes of others.
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