Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Couch
Couch
(kouch)
, Verb.
T.
[
imp. & p. p.
Couched
(koucht)
; p. pr. & vb. n.
Couching
.] [F.
coucher
to lay down, lie down, OF. colchier
, fr. L. collocare
to lay, put, place; col-
+ locare
to place, fr. locus
place. See Locus
.] 1.
To lay upon a bed or other resting place.
Where unbruised youth, with unstuffed brain,
Does
Does
couch
his limbs, there golden sleep doth reign. Shakespeare
2.
To arrange or dispose as in a bed; – sometimes followed by the reflexive pronoun.
The waters
couch
themselves as may be to the center of this globe, in a spherical convexity. T. Burnet.
3.
To lay or deposit in a bed or layer; to bed.
It is at this day in use at Gaza, to
couch
potsherds, or vessels of earth, in their walls. Bacon.
4.
(Paper Making)
To transfer (as sheets of partly dried pulp) from the wire cloth mold to a felt blanket, for further drying.
5.
To conceal; to include or involve darkly.
There is all this, and more, that lies naturally
couched
under this allegory. L’Estrange.
6.
To arrange; to place; to inlay.
[Obs.]
Chaucer.
7.
To put into some form of language; to express; to phrase; – used with
in
and under
. A well-
couched
invective. Milton.
I had received a letter from Flora
couched
in rather cool terms. Blackw. Mag.
8.
(Med.)
To treat by pushing down or displacing the opaque lens with a needle;
as, to
. couch
a cataractTo couch a spear
or To couch a lance
to lower to the position of attack; to place in rest.
He stooped his head, and
And spurred his steed to full career.
couched his spear
,And spurred his steed to full career.
Sir W. Scott.
To couch malt
, to spread malt on a floor.
Mortimer.
Couch
,Verb.
I.
1.
To lie down or recline, as on a bed or other place of rest; to repose; to lie.
Where souls do
couch
on flowers, we 'll hand in hand. Shakespeare
If I court moe women, you 'll
couch
with moe men. Shakespeare
2.
To lie down for concealment; to hide; to be concealed; to be included or involved darkly.
We 'll
couch
in the castle ditch, till we see the light of our fairies. Shakespeare
The half-hidden, hallf-revealed wonders, that yet
couch
beneath the words of the Scripture. I. Taylor.
3.
To bend the body, as in reverence, pain, labor, etc.; to stoop; to crouch.
[Obs.]
An aged squire
That seemed to
That seemed to
couch
under his shield three-square. Spenser.
1.
A bed or place for repose or sleep; particularly, in the United States, a lounge.
Gentle sleep . . . why liest thou with the vile
In loathsome beds, and leavest the kingly
In loathsome beds, and leavest the kingly
couch
? Shakespeare
Like one that wraps the drapery of his
About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams.
couch
About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams.
Bryant.
2.
Any place for repose, as the lair of a beast, etc.
3.
A mass of steeped barley spread upon a floor to germinate, in malting; or the floor occupied by the barley;
as,
. couch
of malt4.
(Painting & Gilding)
A preliminary layer, as of color, size, etc.
Webster 1828 Edition
Couch
COUCH
,Verb.
I.
1.
To lie down, as on a bed or place of repose.2.
To lie down on the knees; to stop and recline on the knees, as a beast.Fierce tigers couched around.
3.
To lie down in secret or in ambush; to lie close and concealed.The earl of Angus couched in a furrow.
Judah couched as a lion. Genesis 44.
4.
To lie; to lie in a bed or stratum.Blessed of the Lord be his land-for the dew, and for the deep that coucheth beneath. Deuteronomy. 33.
5.
To stoop; to bend the body or back; to lower in reverence, or to bend under labor, pain, or a burden.Issachar is a strong ass, couching down between two burdens. Genesis 44.
These couchings, and these lowly courtesies.
COUCH
,Verb.
T.
1.
To lay down; to repose on a bed or place of rest.Where unbruised youth, with unstuffed brain, doth couch his limbs.
2.
To lay down; to spread on a bed or floor; as, to couch malt.3.
To lay close, or in a stratum.The waters couch themselves, as close as may be, to the center of the globe.
4.
To hide; to lay close, or in another body.It is in use at this day, to couch vessels in walls, to gather the wind from the top, and pass it down in spouts into rooms.
5.
To include secretly; to hide; or to express in obscure terms, that imply what is to be understood; with under.All this, and more, lies couched under this allegory.
Hence,
6.
To involve; to include; to comprise; to comprehend or express.This great argument for a future state, which St. Paul hath couched int he words read.
7.
To lie close.8.
To fix a spear in the rest, in the posture of attack.They couched their spears.
9.
To depress the condensed crystaline humor or film that overspreads the pupil of the eye. To remove a catarct, by entering a needle through the coats of the eye, and pushing the lens to the bottom of the vitreous humor, and then downwards and outwards, so as to leave it in the under and outside of the eye. The true phrase is, to couch a cataract; but we say, to couch they eye, or the patient.COUCH
,Noun.
1.
A bed; a place for rest or sleep.2.
A seat of repose; a place for rest and ease, on which it is common to lie down undressed.3.
A layer of stratum; as a couch of malt.4.
In painting, a lay or impression of color, in oil or water, covering the canvas, wall, or other matter to be painted.5.
Any lay, or impression, used to make a thing firm or consistent, or to screen it from the weather.6.
A covering of gold or silver leaf, laid on any substance to be gilded or silvered.Definition 2024
Couch
couch
couch
See also: Couch
English
Alternative forms
- cowch (obsolete)
Noun
couch (plural couches)
- An item of furniture, often upholstered, for the comfortable seating of more than one person.
- 2009, Nancy Bishop, Secrets from the Casting Couch: On Camera Strategies for Actors from a Casting Director, London: Methuen Drama, A & C Black, ISBN 978-1-4081-1327-1:
- At a casting workshop, an actor was performing a blank scene […] and he had not bothered to make any choices about why he was on stage, what his motivation was, what he was playing. He had decided who he was and where he was (on a couch with his girlfriend) but had not decided what he wanted. So the performance was flat and lifeless.
- 2010, Alessandra Lemma; Matthew Patrick, “Off the Couch and Round the Conference Table”, in Alessandra Lemma and Matthew Patrick, editors, Off the Couch: Contemporary Psychoanalytic Applications, London: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-47615-7:
- […] I want to try to describe my efforts to take psychoanalysis as a method off the couch and into the work of creating and using a political conference table.
- 2014, Jennifer Mathieu, The Truth About Alice: A Novel, New York, N.Y.: Roaring Brook Press, ISBN 978-1-59643-909-2:
- It's not a particularly unique living room. It has a window that faces the street, two broken-in beige couches, a few end tables, a television (not the latest model), and a dark blue throw rug in the center of it all. Alice sat down on one end of one couch, and I sat down on the other end.
-
- A bed, a resting-place.
- 1596–1599, William Shakespeare, “The Second Part of King Henry the Fourth, Containing his Death: and the Coronation of King Henry the Fift”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act II, scene i, page 85:
- c. 1811 or 1816, William Cullen Bryant, “The Fragment [later renamed Thanatopsis]”, in North American Review, Boston, Mass.: O. Everett, published September 1817, OCLC 4604572:
- [A]pproach thy grave / Like one that wraps the drapery of his couch / About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams.
- 1896, A[lfred] E[dward] Housman, A Shropshire Lad, London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner, OCLC 2026821, stanza XLVI, lines 19–22:
- [H]e and those / Shall bide eternal bedfellows / Where low upon the couch he lies / Whence he never shall arise.
- 1963, Margery Allingham, chapter 1, in The China Governess: A Mystery, London: Chatto & Windus, OCLC 483591931, OL 2004261W:
- The half-dozen pieces […] were painted white and carved with festoons of flowers, birds and cupids. […] The bed was the most extravagant piece. Its graceful cane halftester rose high towards the cornice and was so festooned in carved white wood that the effect was positively insecure, as if the great couch were trimmed with icing sugar.
- 1997, Nancy Bookidis; Ronald S. Stroud, The Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore: Topography and Architecture (Corinth; vol. 18, pt. 3), Princeton, N.J.: American School of Classical Studies at Athens, ISBN 978-0-87661-183-8, page 22:
- The dining room that is typical of the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore differs considerably from the large public dining hall known from other sites such as Perachora or the Argive Heraion. It is small and encloses no more than nine couches, with seven or eight being most common. […] Throughout, we use the term "banquette" to indicate the continuous platform in contrast to "couch," which designates a portion of that banquette reserved for one diner. […] [I]ndividual couches are always marked off by contoured armrests, composed of a single row of fieldstones plastered with clay.
-
- (art, painting and gilding) A preliminary layer, as of colour or size.
- 1839, Jean-François-Léonor Mérimée; W[illiam] B[enjamin] Sarsfield Taylor, “On the Preservation of Pictures, and the Methods Used for Restoring Them”, in The Art of Painting in Oil, and in Fresco: Being a History of the Various Processes and Materials Employed, from Its Discovery, by Hubert and John Van Eyck, to the Present Time: Translated from the Original French Treatise of M. J. F. L. Mérimée, Secretary to the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, in Paris. With Original Observations on the Rise and Progress of British Art, the French and English Chromatic Scales, and Theories of Colouring, by W. B. Sarsfield Taylor, Senior Curator of the Living Model Academy, &c. &c., London: Whittaker & Co. Ave Maria Lane, OCLC 609196706, page 231:
- For the re-lining, the usual method is to strain a new and strong cloth of an even surface upon the stretcher, to rub it down smooth with pumice stone, and then to give it an even couch of paste, a similar couch is then to be applied to the back of the picture after it has been freed from all inequalities; […]
- 2008, Jodi Brody, Portrait Painting with Classical Old Masters Techniques: A Guide to Using the Venetian Methods, [Raleigh, N.C.]: Lulu, ISBN 978-0-557-01529-0, page 58:
- Once you have chosen which color of underpainting you will use, you should apply the paint to get the values, lighting, and the likeness perfect. The underpainting is applied using a couch of medium and the paint is worked into that medium in very small amounts and in small areas at a time. […] Your paint should glide and then melt into the couch as you work the paint with your brush.
-
- (brewing) A mass of steeped barley spread upon a floor to germinate, in malting; or the floor occupied by the barley.
- a couch of malt
- 1849, William Ford, “Malting”, in An Historical Account of the Malt Trade and Laws, Shewing the Decline, and Causes of the Decline in the Consumption of Malt; with a Practical Treatise on Malting and Brewing, Deduced from Thirty Years Experience, London: Published by the author, 10, West Square, St. George's, Southwark, and 5, Talbot Court, Gracechurch Street, OCLC 881493046, pages 125–126:
- MALTING IN MUNICH. The barley is steeped till the acrospire, in embryo, or seed germ, seems to be quickened; […] As long however as the seed-gum sticks to the husk, it has not been steeped enough for exposure to the underground malt-floor: nor can deficient steeping be safely made up for afterwards by sprinkling the malt couch with a watering can, which is apt to render the malting irregular. […] It [the barley] is now taken out and laid on the couch floor, in a square heap, eight to ten inches high, and it is turned over morning and evening with dexterity, so as to throw the middle portion upon the top and bottom of the new made couch.
Synonyms
Hyponyms
- (item of furniture): chesterfield, daybed, love seat
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
Terms derived from couch
|
Descendants
- German: Couch
Translations
furniture for seating of more than one person
|
|
Etymology 2
From Middle English couchen, a borrowing from Old French se couchier (“go to bed”) (earlier form colchier), from Latin collocō (“to place, to set in order, to assemble, to settle”), from com- (“together, with”) + locō (“to put, to place, to set”). Doublet of collocate.
Verb
couch (third-person singular simple present couches, present participle couching, simple past and past participle couched)
- To lie down; to recline (upon a couch or other place of repose).
- 1598–1599, William Shakespeare, “Much Adoe about Nothing”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act III, scene i, page 110:
- c. 1603, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Othello, the Moore of Venice”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act IV, scene iii, page 333:
- c. 1606–1607, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Anthony and Cleopatra”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act IV, scene xiv, page 362:
- Stay for me, / Where Soules do couch on Flowers, wee'l hand in hand, / And with our ſprightly Port make the Ghoſtes gaze: […] .
- 1994, Winona Ryder as Lelaina Pierce, Reality Bites, MCA Universal Home Video, OCLC 31129702:
- All you do around here, Troy, is eat and couch and fondle the remote control.
-
- (archaic) To lie down for concealment; to conceal, to hide; to be concealed; to be included or involved darkly or secretly.
- before 1597, William Shakespeare, “The Merry Wiues of Windsor”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act V, scene ii, page 58:
- Come, come: wee'll couch i'th Caſtle-ditch, till we ſee the light of our Fairies.
- 1661, Galileo Galilei; Thomas Salusbury, transl., The Systeme of the World: In Four Dialogues wherein the Two Grand Systemes of Ptolomy and Copernicus are Largely Discoursed of: And the Reasons, both Phylosophical and Physical, as well on the One Side as the Other, Impartially and Indefinitely Propounded, London: William Leybourn, OCLC 614597712, dialogue 2:
- You have overlooked a fallacy couched in the experiment of the stick.
- 1832, Isaac Taylor, “The State of Sacred Science: ‘Thy Testimonies are My Meditation’”, in Saturday Evening, London: Holdsworth and Ball, OCLC 262702496; republished Hingham, Mass.: Published by C. & E. B. Gill [...], 1833, OCLC 191249371, page 91:
- […] Or who, regardless of the powers of calumny that keep their state as ministers of vengeance around the throne of ancient Prejudice, explores anew the half-hidden, half-revealed wonders, that yet couch beneath the words of the Scripture?
-
- To bend the body, as in reverence, pain, labor, etc.; to stoop; to crouch.
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene: Disposed into Twelue Books, Fashioning XII. Morall Vertues, London: Printed [by John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, OCLC 606546721, book III, canto I, stanza IV; republished as The Works of Mr. Edmund Spenser, volume II, London: Printed for Jacob Tonson at Shakespear's Head, over against Catherine-street in the Strand, 1715, OCLC 645789119, page 368:
- At laſt, as thro an open Plain they yode, / They ſpy'd a Knight, that towards pricked fair, / And him beſide an aged Squire there rode, / That ſeem'd to couch under his Shield three-ſquare, / As if that Age bad him that Burden ſpare, / And yield it thoſe that ſtouter could it wield: […]
- c. 1599, William Shakespeare, “The Life of Henry the Fift”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act IV, scene ii, page 86:
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene: Disposed into Twelue Books, Fashioning XII. Morall Vertues, London: Printed [by John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, OCLC 606546721, book III, canto I, stanza IV; republished as The Works of Mr. Edmund Spenser, volume II, London: Printed for Jacob Tonson at Shakespear's Head, over against Catherine-street in the Strand, 1715, OCLC 645789119, page 368:
- (transitive) To lay something upon a bed or other resting place.
- c. 1591–1595?, William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Romeo and Ivliet”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies: Published According to the True Originall Copies, London: Printed by Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, OCLC 606515358, Act II, scene iii, page 61:
- 1974, Geoffrey Moorhouse, The Fearful Void, London: Hodder & Stoughton, ISBN 978-0-340-16692-5:
- The storm seemed to have acquired a second wind, blowing as fiercely as in the morning, and at the tree we couched the beasts and started to upload again. We rolled into our blankets once more, and passed more hours sheltering blindly from the blasting of the sand.
-
- (transitive) To arrange or dispose as if in a bed.
- 1684, Thomas Burnet, The Theory of the Earth: Containing an Account of the Original of the Earth, and of All the General Changes which it Hath Already Undergone, or Is to Undergo, Till the Consummation of All Things, volume I, London: Printed by R[oger] Norton for Walter Kettilby, OCLC 12330969, book I; republished as The Theory of the Earth: Containing an Account of the Original of the Earth, and of All the General Changes which it Hath Already Undergone, or Is to Undergo, Till the Consummation of All Things. The Two First Books Concerning the Deluge, and Concerning Paradise, 3rd edition, volume I, London: Printed for R[oger] N[orton] for Walter Kettilby, at the Bishop's-Head in S. Paul's Church-Yard, 1697, OCLC 228725686, page 56:
- [T]he Sea and the Land make one Globe, and the waters couch themſelves, as cloſe as may be, to the Center of this Globe in a Spherical convexity; ſo that if all the Mountains and Hills were ſcal'd, and the Earth made even, the Waters would not overflow its ſmooth ſurface; […]
- 1684, Thomas Burnet, The Theory of the Earth: Containing an Account of the Original of the Earth, and of All the General Changes which it Hath Already Undergone, or Is to Undergo, Till the Consummation of All Things, volume I, London: Printed by R[oger] Norton for Walter Kettilby, OCLC 12330969, book I; republished as The Theory of the Earth: Containing an Account of the Original of the Earth, and of All the General Changes which it Hath Already Undergone, or Is to Undergo, Till the Consummation of All Things. The Two First Books Concerning the Deluge, and Concerning Paradise, 3rd edition, volume I, London: Printed for R[oger] N[orton] for Walter Kettilby, at the Bishop's-Head in S. Paul's Church-Yard, 1697, OCLC 228725686, page 56:
- (transitive) To lay or deposit in a bed or layer; to bed.
- 1627, Francis Bacon, “VIII. Century”, in Sylua Syluarum: or A Naturall Historie: in Ten Centuries. VVritten by the Right Honourable Francis Lo[rd] Verulam Viscount St. Alban. Published after the Authors Death, by VVilliam Rawley Doctor of Diuinitie, late His Lordships Chaplaine, London: Printed by I[ohn] H[aviland and Augustine Mathewes] for William Lee at the the Turks Head in Fleet-street, next to the Miter, OCLC 606502643; republished as Sylva Sylvarvm: or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centvries. Written by the Right Honourable Francis Lo. Verulam Viscount St. Alban. Published after the Authors Death, by William Rawley Doctor in Divinitie, One of His Majesties Chaplaines. Hereunto is now Added an Alphabeticall Table of the Principall Things Contained in the Whole Worke, London: Printed by John Haviland for William Lee, and are to be sold by John Williams, 1635, OCLC 606502717, page 197:
- It is, at this Day, in uſe, in Gaza, to couch Pot-Sheards or Veſſels of Earth, in their Walls, to gather the Wind from the top, and to paſſe it downe in Spouts into Roomes. It is a Device for Freſhneſſe, in great Heats; […]
- 1627, Francis Bacon, “VIII. Century”, in Sylua Syluarum: or A Naturall Historie: in Ten Centuries. VVritten by the Right Honourable Francis Lo[rd] Verulam Viscount St. Alban. Published after the Authors Death, by VVilliam Rawley Doctor of Diuinitie, late His Lordships Chaplaine, London: Printed by I[ohn] H[aviland and Augustine Mathewes] for William Lee at the the Turks Head in Fleet-street, next to the Miter, OCLC 606502643; republished as Sylva Sylvarvm: or A Naturall Historie. In Ten Centvries. Written by the Right Honourable Francis Lo. Verulam Viscount St. Alban. Published after the Authors Death, by William Rawley Doctor in Divinitie, One of His Majesties Chaplaines. Hereunto is now Added an Alphabeticall Table of the Principall Things Contained in the Whole Worke, London: Printed by John Haviland for William Lee, and are to be sold by John Williams, 1635, OCLC 606502717, page 197:
- (transitive) To lower (a spear or lance) to the position of attack.
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene: Disposed into Twelue Books, Fashioning XII. Morall Vertues, London: Printed [by John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, OCLC 606546721, book III, canto V, stanza III; republished as The Works of Mr. Edmund Spenser, volume II, London: Printed for Jacob Tonson at Shakespear's Head, over against Catherine-street in the Strand, 1715, OCLC 645789119, page 240:
- And fairly couching his ſteel-headed Spear, / Him firſt ſaluted with a ſturdy Stroke: / It booted nought Sir Guyon, coming near, / To think ſuch hideous Puiſſance on foot to bear.
- 1805, Walter Scott, The Lay of the Last Minstrel: A Poem, London: Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, Paternoster-Row, and A. Constable and Co. Edinburgh; by James Ballantyne, Edinburgh, OCLC 1250572, canto III, stanza V; 2nd edition, London, Printed for Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme, Paternoster-Row, and A. Constable and Co. Edinburgh; by James Ballantyne, Edinburgh, 1805, OCLC 928165697, page 76:
- Stout Deloraine nor sighed, nor prayed, / Nor saint, nor ladye, called to aid: / But he stooped his head, and couched his spear, / And spurred his steed to full career. / The meeting of these champions proud / Seemed like the bursting thunder-cloud.
- 1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene: Disposed into Twelue Books, Fashioning XII. Morall Vertues, London: Printed [by John Wolfe] for William Ponsonbie, OCLC 606546721, book III, canto V, stanza III; republished as The Works of Mr. Edmund Spenser, volume II, London: Printed for Jacob Tonson at Shakespear's Head, over against Catherine-street in the Strand, 1715, OCLC 645789119, page 240:
- (ophthalmology, transitive) In the treatment of a cataract in the eye, to displace the opaque lens with a sharp object such as a needle. The technique is regarded as largely obsolete.
- 1759, William Porterfield, A Treatise on the Eye, the Manner and Phænomena of Vision. In Two Volumes, volume I, Edinburgh: Printed for A. Miller at London, and for G. Hamilton and J. Balfour at Edinburgh, OCLC 745010712, page 433:
- […] A Man having a Cataract in both Eyes, which intirely deprived him of Sight, committed himſelf to an Oculiſt, who finding them ripe, performed the Operation, and couched the Cataracts with all the Succeſs could be deſired; but after they were couched, he could not ſee objects diſtinctly, even at an ordinary Diſtance, without the Help of a very convex Lens; which is what every body has obſerved to be neceſſary to all thoſe who have had a Cataract couched: […] .
-
- (paper-making, transitive) To transfer (for example, sheets of partly dried pulp) from the wire mould to a felt blanket for further drying.
- 1922 May, “Paper board industry is distinctly American”, in Shears, volume 30, Lafayette, Ind.: Haywood Pub. Co., OCLC 15623309, page 103:
- He invented the grooved wood roll or mandrel on which the thin film of wet paper, as couched from the cylinder mould, was wound and thus the sheet built up to the required thickness, when it was cut from the roll or mandrel along the groove and peeled off to be air dried and sheet calendered.
-
- (sewing, transitive) To attach a thread onto fabric with small stitches in order to add texture.
- To phrase in a particular style; to use specific wording for.
- He couched it as a request, but it was an order.
- 1878, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, volume CXXIII, Edinburgh: William Blackwood; London: T[homas] Cadell and W. Davis, OCLC 631932349, page 49:
- And here I should observe that I had received a letter from Flora couched in rather cool terms, congratulating me on my marriage; […]
- 2012 June 26, Genevieve Koski, “Justin Bieber: Believe”, in The A.V. Club, archived from the original on 29 June 2012:
- More significantly, rigid deference to [Justin] Bieber’s still-young core fan base keeps things resolutely PG, with any acknowledgement of sex either couched in vague “touch your body” workarounds or downgraded to desirous hand-holding and eye-gazing.
Synonyms
- (lie down (on a couch)): lie down, recline
- (to word or phrase): explain, express, phrase, term, word
Derived terms
Translations
lie down (on a couch)
phrase in a particular style
Etymology 3
From quitch, from Old English cwice.
Noun
couch (uncountable)
- Couch grass, a species of persistent grass, Elymus repens, usually considered a weed.
- 1864 November 19, “The Agricultural Gazette”, in The Gardeners' Chronicle and Agricultural Gazette: A Newspaper of Rural Economy and General News, volume 24, number 47, London: Published for the proprietors, at 41, Wellington Street, Covent Garden, W.C., OCLC 220082288, page 1114, column 2:
- The first field it did was one on which Swedes had been roughly planted the year previously, but it had not been touched since the crop was eaten off, and was then a perfect wilderness of Couch, Docks, Thistles, and Dandelions.
-
Translations
couch grass — see couch grass
See also
- Elymus repens on Wikipedia.Wikipedia