dresser
1 Americannoun
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a dressing table or bureau.
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a sideboard or set of shelves for dishes and cooking utensils.
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Obsolete. a table or sideboard on which food is dressed for serving.
noun
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a person who dresses.
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a person employed to dress actors, care for costumes, etc., at a theater, television studio, or the like.
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Chiefly British. a surgeon's assistant.
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a person who dresses in a particular manner, as specified.
a fancy dresser;
a careful and distinctive dresser.
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any of several tools or devices used in dressing materials.
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Metalworking.
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a block, fitting into an anvil, on which pieces are forged.
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a mallet for shaping sheet metal.
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a tool for truing the surfaces of grinding wheels.
noun
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a person who dresses in a specified way
a fashionable dresser
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theatre a person employed to assist actors in putting on and taking off their costumes
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a tool used for dressing stone or other materials
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a person who assists a surgeon during operations
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See window-dresser
noun
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a set of shelves, usually also with cupboards or drawers, for storing or displaying dishes, etc
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a chest of drawers for storing clothing in a bedroom or dressing room, often having a mirror on the top
Etymology
Origin of dresser1
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English dresso(u)r, dressur(e), “sideboard,” from Anglo-French; Middle French dresseur, Old French dreçor, dreceor(e), equivalent to dreci(ier) “to dress ” + -ore -ory 2
Origin of dresser2
First recorded in 1400–50; late Middle English: “guide; director”; see origin at dress, -er 1
Explanation
A dresser is a piece of furniture with several drawers that's used for storing clothes or other things. You might have a dresser in your bedroom that's full of sweaters. In the US, the word dresser almost always refers to a tall, upright type of furniture that's fitted with sliding drawers. You can keep your socks in a dresser, or put a dresser in your kitchen and keep tablecloths and silverware in it. If a person is called a dresser, she either works with theater actors, helping them put their costumes on, or dresses in an unusual or distinctive way: "She's such a colorful dresser!"
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
That used to be a dresser she found on Craigslist.
From Los Angeles Times • Apr. 21, 2026
The top of the dresser needed serious rehab: scrubbing, sanding and repainting to create a shiny finish.
From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 4, 2026
This ITV drama from the production company behind The Crown re-examines the events surrounding the killing by Jane Andrews, former dresser to the then Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson, of her partner Thomas Cressman.
From BBC • Dec. 28, 2025
She walked over to her dresser, the top of which held a few small glass sculptures of dolphins with iridescent eyes that she had been collecting off and on for more than a decade.
From Slate • Nov. 15, 2025
She sat cross-legged on their dilapidated dresser, smug as a cat.
From "Summer of the Mariposas" by Guadalupe García McCall
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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.