COUCH


Meaning of COUCH in English

I. ˈkau̇ch; in sense 9 usually ˈküch verb

( -ed/-ing/-es )

Etymology: Middle English couchen, from Middle French couchier, coucher to lay down, put to bed, from Latin collocare to lay, put, place, from com- + locare to place — more at locate

transitive verb

1.

a. obsolete : to set over : overlay , inlay

b. : to embroider by laying an outlining thread along the surface and fastening it with small stitches at regular intervals

2.

a. : to compose, settle, or recline for sleep or rest

at the end of the day's journey the camels needed no urging to be couched — John Skölle

— used of an animal usually reflexively or passively

a lion couching himself by the tree

b. : to compose for sleep : cause to lie down : bed — used of a person usually reflexively or passively

couched on the ground

c. : to place, locate, or settle especially in a position suggesting security, protection, or repose : place in a particular setting or background

couched in the magnificence of gorgeous and elaborate costumes — Faubion Bowers

3. archaic : to lay or deposit in a bed or layer (as in building or gardening) : bed

4. : to place or hold in a position level and pointed forward ready or as if ready for use

advancing with spears couched

couching his lance, he seated himself firmly in his saddle — W.S.Maugham

5. : express:

a. : to place or compose in a specified kind of language : word , phrase

prayer, couched in the idiom of the Bible — Edna Ferber

b. : to include or imply obscurely or so as to make comprehension difficult

all this and more … lies naturally couched under this allegory — Roger L'Estrange

6. archaic : to place in hiding or ambush : set in hiding or lurking — usually used reflexively or in the passive

7. : to treat (a cataract or a person having a cataract) by an operation intended to restore partial vision by displacing the lens of the eye into the vitreous

8. : to bring down : lower , depress , contract

some of the quills couched, some still erect

9.

a. : to press (a wet sheet of new handmade paper still on the mold) onto a felt

b. : to press (a sheet of paper stock) on the wire of a cylinder machine and transfer onto a felt for further pressing and drying

c. : to press water from (a sheet) on a couch roll of a fourdrinier machine or extract it by a suction couch preparatory to transferring to a felt

intransitive verb

1. : to lie down for or as if for sleep or rest

a. of a person : to recline on or as if on a bed ; sometimes : to couple in sexual intercourse

a goddess couching with a mortal — Andrew Lang

b. of an animal : to lie down, recline, or kneel for or as if for rest

boars couching

the odd way a camel couches

c. : to lie or be situated

the deep that couches beneath — Deut 33:13 (Revised Standard Version)

2. : to bend down low:

a. : to kneel, stoop, or bow especially in obeisance, subserviency, or submission

b. : to lie or lurk in concealment or ambush

couching in the wood to waylay the traveler

3. of leaves : to lie in a heap or mass while decomposition or fermentation proceeds

Synonyms: see lurk

II. ˈkau̇ch; in sense 3 often and in sense 4 usually ˈküch noun

( -es )

Usage: often attributive

Etymology: Middle English couche, from Middle French, from Old French culche, couche, from couchier

1.

a. archaic : bed

b. archaic : a piece of furniture or other arrangement on which one sleeps

c. : an article of furniture for sitting or reclining ; specifically : a piece of upholstered furniture that is long enough to lie down on or that can seat several persons and that has sometimes a headrest at one end or sometimes a raised back and arms at both ends : sofa

d. : a psychiatrist's or psychoanalyst's couch on which patients recline

2.

a. : the den of an animal

b. : the burrow of an otter

3. : a layer or stratum that is preliminary in some fine arts processes to later layers

4. : a board covered with felt or flannel on which the sheets of pulp for handmade paper are pressed — compare couch roll

III.

variant of couch grass

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.