[
US
/ˈwɔɹˌdɹoʊb/
]
[ UK /wˈɔːdɹəʊb/ ]
[ UK /wˈɔːdɹəʊb/ ]
NOUN
- a tall piece of furniture that provides storage space for clothes; has a door and rails or hooks for hanging clothes
- collection of clothing belonging to one person
- collection of costumes belonging to a theatrical company
How To Use wardrobe In A Sentence
- The battery-operated doll comes complete with walkie-talkie and a wardrobe choice of military fatigues or bolero jacket and gold trousers.
- Upstairs were the bedrooms; mother-and-fathers room the largest; a smaller room for one or two sons, another for one or two daughters; each of these rooms containing a double bed, a washstand, a bureau, a wardrobe, a little table, a rocking-chair, and often a chair or two that had been slightly damaged downstairs, but not enough to justify either the expense of repair or decisive abandonment in the attic. Chapter 1
- The separate pieces can be mixed and matched for more wardrobe options.
- I throw a suitcase on the bed and pop it open, and begin to stuff clothes into drawers and hang them in the wardrobe.
- The guest bedroom with a deep, recessed window to the front also benefits from en suite facilities and a fitted wardrobe.
- Personally, I don't wear separates, but one can wear them occasionally to freshen their style and wardrobe, with a whole new casual yet elegant look.
- As the endlessly sweet but slightly pinheaded stewardess-to-be Donna, She is yum-yum-yummy in a procession of miniskirts, bikinis, halter tops and other wardrobe choices that make the most of her lithe legginess.
- Her wardrobe is huge and she wants to shock - and that costs serious money. The Sun
- With all the warm woollies tucked away in your wardrobe along with mothballs for company, it is time you get yourself a brand new wardrobe.
- The master bedroom has built in wardrobes surrounding the bedhead, two windows overlooking the front garden and an en suite bathroom.