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housecoat

[ UK /hˈa‍ʊskə‍ʊt/ ]
NOUN
  1. a loose dressing gown for women

How To Use housecoat In A Sentence

  • A quick rush of embarrassment flooded to the Major’s cheeks and he smoothed helplessly at the lap of his crimson, clematis-covered housecoat with hands that felt like spades. Excerpt: Major Pettigrew's Last Stand by Helen Simonson
  • She was no longer wearing her housecoat, now she wore a black, silk negligee from her wardrobe that Morgan had taken a liking to.
  • A young woman in a cheap nylon housecoat leaned in a doorway smoking a cigarette. THE KEYS OF HELL
  • Her crimson housecoat was wrapped around her as she began the walk to her room.
  • She was wrapped up in a housecoat and slippers and was perched up on the couch, absorbed into what was on the television.
  • Manuela dug her hand into the pocket of her housecoat, removed a key and handed it to Nicole. THE DEVIL'S DOOR
  • Elena's mother stood in the doorway, wearing her housecoat and slippers, she held a tissue to her nose.
  • Once in a while the stall-keeper in her housecoat and dyed-black hair will, almost accidentally, break into a pleasant expression.
  • In another there is a room, lit coldly by far too many fluorescent tubes, where you can go to buy nightgowns, camisoles, teddies, housecoats and dusters.
  • On one glorious windy afternoon, just as school let out, a coalhouse only two alleys away caught fire, and the fire truck that came clanging stuck fast and stood helplessly roaring, smothered in children, while two women in housecoats put out the fire with water from their mop pails. The Dollmaker
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