adv
In bed, or on the bed; confined to bed.
n
Alternative spelling of bath mat [A small mat used next to a bathtub to absorb water and thus prevent slipping.]
n
Synonym of bed of roses (“pleasant or easy situation”)
n
Alternative form of bedwetter [A person who (habitually) urinates in his or her bed (during sleep).]
n
Alternative spelling of bedbath
adj
Alternative form of bedfast [Unable to leave one's bed, especially because of illness, weakness or obesity.]
adj
Alternative spelling of bedridden [Confined to bed because of infirmity or illness.]
v
(rare, intransitive) To wet the bed: to experience bed-wetting or enuresis, to urinate while asleep.
n
Alternative form of bedwetter [A person who (habitually) urinates in his or her bed (during sleep).]
n
Alternative form of bed blocker [(chiefly UK, idiomatic, derogatory, medicine, public policy) An elderly hospitalized person who is too infirm to return home but not sufficiently ill to necessitate continued hospitalization, creating a situation in which his or her hospital stay is prolonged while authorities or relatives search for a suitable placement amid the scarce resources of nursing homes or other long-term care facilities.]
n
Alternative form of beddy-bye [(idiomatic, baby-talk, childish) Bedtime for a toddler, going to sleep, going to bed, sleeping.]
n
(UK dialectal) A bedridden person; a helpless cripple.
n
(medicine) Confinement to bed, often under instructions of a physician, in order to recover from an injury, an illness, or the frailty associated with other physical discomforts such as a difficult pregnancy.
n
Obsolete spelling of bedtime [The time or hour at which one retires to bed in order to sleep.]
adv
Alternative form of bedward [Toward bed.]
v
(rare) Alternative form of bed-wet [(rare, intransitive) To wet the bed: to experience bed-wetting or enuresis, to urinate while asleep.]
n
A person who (habitually) urinates in his or her bed (during sleep).
n
(UK, slang, obsolete) A bed.
adj
(Australia, New Zealand, Britain, Canada, US, simile, colloquial, mildly vulgar) (of an object) Exceptionally well constructed; strong or tough; overbuilt or overengineered.
n
Obsolete form of close-stool. [(now historical) A chamber pot enclosed in a stool or box; a commode.]
n
Alternative spelling of co-sleeping [The practice in which babies and young children sleep with one or both parents.]
v
To bend the body, as in reverence, pain, labor, etc.; to stoop; to crouch.
n
Synonym of exit bag. (uncommon)
n
Alternative letter-case form of Groom of the Stool [(Britain, monarchy, historical) Originally an official responsible for helping the English monarch use the toilet; later a senior official who was allowed access to the monarch's privy chamber and served as a personal secretary.]
n
(historical) A sleeping arrangement, usually in homeless shelters, over a rope.
n
(obsolete) A granary; a barn.
n
(anatomy, UK dialectal) The lumbar region; loin.
n
A chamber pot built into a chair.
n
A convenient storage location or hiding spot created by the arrangement or form of surrounding objects
n
A type of mobile building.
n
Alternative spelling of reed bed [A place where reeds grow.]
v
To live (in or with); to shack up.
n
(Scotland, euphemistic, obsolete) A toilet seat.
n
A bed used by a person who is sick.
n
Alternative spelling of waterbed [A bed with a tough plastic mattress filled with water.]
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!
Today's secret word is 8 letters and means "Believable and worthy of trust." Can you find it?