well-covered
See also: well covered
English
Alternative forms
Adjective
well-covered (comparative more well-covered, superlative most well-covered)
- Amply equipped or provisioned, especially with respect to a place where food is served.
- 1864 August – 1866 January, [Elizabeth] Gaskell, chapter 33, in Wives and Daughters. An Every-day Story. […], volumes (please specify |volume=I or II), London: Smith, Elder and Co., […], published 1866, →OCLC:
- He kept shaking Mr Gibson's hand all the time till he had placed him, nothing loth, at the well-covered dining-table.
- 1865 May 15 – 1866 January 1, Anthony Trollope, “Taking Possession”, in The Belton Estate. […], volume III, London: Chapman and Hall, […], published December 1865 (indicated as 1866), →OCLC, page 239:
- How are you to bid a starving man to wait when you put him down at a well-covered board?
- (chiefly British, of a person, euphemistic) Fat, corpulent, full-figured.
- 1859, George Eliot [pseudonym; Mary Ann Evans], chapter 26, in Adam Bede […], volumes (please specify |volume=I, II, or III), Edinburgh, London: William Blackwood and Sons, →OCLC:
- That simple dancing of well-covered matrons, laying aside for an hour the cares of house and dairy, remembering but not affecting youth, not jealous but proud of the young maidens by their side […] it would be a pleasant variety to see all that sometimes.
- 1921, John Galsworthy, The Forsyte Saga, part 2, ch. 11:
- "She wasn't much of a skeleton as I remember her," murmured Euphemia, "extremely well-covered."
- 2003 March 20, Thomas Stuttaford, “Eat less and walk more to keep diabetes at bay”, in Times Online, UK, retrieved 24 June 2008:
- The sculptor Botero—influenced perhaps by Maillol’s love of well covered women—created in 1981 an overweight, stumpy couple.
Derived terms
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.