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Bed   /bɛd/   Listen
Bed

noun
1.
A piece of furniture that provides a place to sleep.  "The room had only a bed and chair"
2.
A plot of ground in which plants are growing.
3.
A depression forming the ground under a body of water.  Synonym: bottom.
4.
(geology) a stratum of rock (especially sedimentary rock).
5.
A stratum of ore or coal thick enough to be mined with profit.  Synonym: seam.
6.
Single thickness of usually some homogeneous substance.  Synonym: layer.
7.
The flat surface of a printing press on which the type form is laid in the last stage of producing a newspaper or magazine or book etc..
8.
A foundation of earth or rock supporting a road or railroad track.
verb
(past & past part. bedded; pres. part. bedding)
1.
Furnish with a bed.
2.
Place (plants) in a prepared bed of soil.
3.
Put to bed.
4.
Have sexual intercourse with.  Synonyms: bang, be intimate, bonk, do it, eff, fuck, get it on, get laid, have a go at it, have intercourse, have it away, have it off, have sex, hump, jazz, know, lie with, love, make love, make out, roll in the hay, screw, sleep together, sleep with.  "Adam knew Eve" , "Were you ever intimate with this man?"
5.
Prepare for sleep.  Synonyms: crawl in, go to bed, go to sleep, hit the hay, hit the sack, kip down, retire, sack out, turn in.  "He goes to bed at the crack of dawn"  Antonyms: get up, turn out.



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"Bed" Quotes from Famous Books



... When Admiral is annoyed and chased disagreeably by either of his two cage-mates he runs into his sleeping-den, slams the steel door shut from the inside, and thus holds his tormentors completely at bay until it suits him to roll the door back again and come out. At night in winter when he goes to bed he almost always shuts the door tightly from within, and keeps it closed all night. He does not believe in sleeping- porches, nor wide-open windows ...
— The Minds and Manners of Wild Animals • William T. Hornaday

... recently returned with a British convoy from America. They were in Dover at the time. From his sick bed in a hospital, the captain of the Plymouth had appealed to the British naval authorities. In spite of the fact that he was in no condition to leave when he received his orders, he did not wish to deny his crew the privilege of seeing active service, which the call ...
— The Boy Allies with the Victorious Fleets - The Fall of the German Navy • Robert L. Drake

... from the traditions of the well-made play. Gloomy and homely as are the earlier acts, Ibsen sees as yet no way out of the imbroglio but that known to Scribe and the masters of the "well-made" play. The social hypocrisy of Consul Bernick is condoned by a sort of death-bed repentance at the close, which is very much of the usual "bless-ye-my-children" order. The loss of the Indian Girl is miraculously prevented, and at the end the characters are solemnized and warned, yet are left essentially none the worse for ...
— Henrik Ibsen • Edmund Gosse

... of Serum, and the Crassamentum was of a loose Texture. The feverish Symptoms had increased, with the Addition of a Delirium: pergat. On the 7th, the Delirium was grown more violent, so that he could scarce be kept in Bed; his Breathing was difficult, his Eyes red and florid: A Blister was applied to his Back, and the saline Mixture continued. On the 8th, there was no Alteration in the Course of that Day; but being lower towards Night, ...
— An Account of the Diseases which were most frequent in the British military hospitals in Germany • Donald Monro

... perpetual faith in reason and justice: a holy passion for the good and right, which possessed it, and made it devote itself to its work; like the statuary who seeing the fire in the furnace, where he was casting his bronze, on the point of being extinguished, threw his furniture, his children's bed, and even his house into the flame, preferring rather that all should perish than that ...
— History of the Girondists, Volume I - Personal Memoirs of the Patriots of the French Revolution • Alphonse de Lamartine


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