B.Ed.
1 Americanabbreviation
noun
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a piece of furniture upon which or within which a person sleeps, rests, or stays when not well.
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the mattress and bedclothes together with the bedstead of a bed.
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the bedstead alone.
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the act of or time for sleeping.
Now for a cup of cocoa and then bed.
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the use of a bed for the night; lodging.
I reserved a bed at the old inn.
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the marital relationship.
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any resting place.
making his bed under a tree.
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something resembling a bed in form or position.
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a piece or area of ground in a garden or lawn in which plants are grown.
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an area in a greenhouse in which plants are grown.
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the plants in such areas.
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the bottom of a lake, river, sea, or other body of water.
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a piece or part forming a foundation or base.
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a layer of rock; a stratum.
- Synonyms:
- deposit , lode , seam , stratification
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a foundation surface of earth or rock supporting a track, pavement, or the like.
a gravel bed for the roadway.
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Building Trades.
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the underside of a stone, brick, slate, tile, etc., laid in position.
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the upper side of a stone laid in position.
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the layer of mortar in which a brick, stone, etc., is laid.
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the natural stratification of a stone.
a stone laid on bed.
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Furniture. skirt.
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the flat surface in a printing press on which the form of type is laid.
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Transportation. the body or, sometimes, the floor or bottom of a truck or trailer.
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Chemistry. a compact mass of a substance functioning in a reaction as a catalyst or reactant.
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Sports.
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the canvas surface of a trampoline.
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the smooth, wooden floor of a bowling alley.
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the slate surface of a billiard table to which the cloth is fastened.
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Zoology. flesh enveloping the base of a claw, especially the germinative layer beneath the claw.
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Also called mock. Also called mock mold. Shipbuilding. a shaped steel pattern upon which furnaced plates for the hull of a vessel are hammered to shape.
verb (used with object)
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to provide with a bed.
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to put to bed.
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Horticulture. to plant in or as in a bed.
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to lay flat.
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to place in a bed or layer.
to bed oysters.
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to embed, as in a substance.
bedding the flagstones in concrete.
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to take or accompany to bed for purposes of sexual intercourse.
verb (used without object)
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to have sleeping accommodations.
He says we can bed there for the night.
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Geology. to form a compact layer or stratum.
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(of a metal structural part) to lie flat or close against another part.
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Archaic. to go to bed.
verb phrase
idioms
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make one's bed, to be responsible for one's own actions and their results.
You've made your bed—now lie in it.
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jump / get into bed with, to form a close, often temporary, alliance, usually with an unlikely ally.
Industry was charged with jumping into bed with labor on the issue.
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put to bed,
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to help (a child, invalid, etc.) go to bed.
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Printing. to lock up (forms) in a press in preparation for printing.
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to work on the preparation of (an edition of a newspaper, periodical, etc.) up to the time of going to press.
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go to bed with, to have sexual intercourse with.
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get up on the wrong side of the bed, to be irritable or bad-tempered from the start of a day.
Never try to reason with him when he's gotten up on the wrong side of the bed.
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in bed,
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beneath the covers of a bed.
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engaged in sexual intercourse.
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go to bed,
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to retire, especially for the night.
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to engage in sexual relations.
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make a bed, to fit a bed with sheets and blankets.
abbreviation
"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012noun
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a piece of furniture on which to sleep
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the mattress and bedclothes on such a piece of furniture
an unmade bed
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sleep or rest
time for bed
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any place in which a person or animal sleeps or rests
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med a unit of potential occupancy in a hospital or residential institution
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informal a place for sexual intercourse
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informal sexual intercourse
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a plot of ground in which plants are grown, esp when considered together with the plants in it
a flower bed
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the bottom of a river, lake, or sea
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a part of this used for cultivation of a plant or animal
oyster beds
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a layer of crushed rock, gravel, etc, used as a foundation for a road, railway, etc
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a layer of mortar in a masonry wall
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the underside of a brick, tile, slate, etc, when in position Compare back 1
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any underlying structure or part
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a layer of rock, esp sedimentary rock
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the flat part of a letterpress printing press onto or against which the type forme is placed
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a layer of solid particles of an absorbent, catalyst, or reagent through which a fluid is passed during the course of a chemical reaction or other process
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a machine base on which a moving part carrying a tool or workpiece slides
lathe bed
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a situation of comfort or ease
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archaic to give birth (to)
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a situation or position of extreme difficulty
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a bed studded with nails on which a fakir lies
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informal to be ill-tempered from the start of the day
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(often foll by with) to have sexual intercourse (with)
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journalism printing (of a newspaper, magazine, etc) to go to press; start printing
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informal cooperating closely with (another person, organization, government, etc.) esp covertly
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journalism to finalize work on (a newspaper, magazine, etc) so that it is ready to go to press
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printing to lock up the type forme of (a publication) in the press before printing
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to remain in bed, esp because of illness
verb
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(usually foll by down) to go to or put into a place to sleep or rest
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(tr) to have sexual intercourse with
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(tr) to place, fix, or sink firmly into position; embed
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geology to form or be arranged in a distinct layer; stratify
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to plant in a bed of soil
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A layer of sediments or rock, such as coal, that extends under a large area and has a distinct set of characteristics that distinguish it from other layers below and above it.
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The bottom of a body of water, such as a lake, stream, or ocean.
Other Word Forms
- bedless adjective
- bedlike adjective
- interbed adjective
Etymology
Origin of bed
First recorded before 1000; Middle English; Old English bedd; cognate with Old Frisian, Dutch bed, Old Saxon bed(de), Old High German betti ( German Bett ), Gothic badi, from unattested Germanic badjan (neuter); akin to Latin fodere “to dig,” Old Church Slavonic bodǫ, Lithuanian bedù “I pierce,” Welsh bedd “a grave”; presumably a bed was dug out in the ground
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.