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duvet

/doo-vey, dyoo-/US // duˈveɪ, dyu- //UK // (ˈduːveɪ) //

羽绒被,羽绒服

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a usually down-filled quilt, often with a removable cover; comforter.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Starting at $185, these devices stand at the edge of your bed and blow cool air between your fitted sheet and duvet.

  • The line includes the new Snow Mattress, lightweight duvets, hyperlite sheets, and more.

  • You can also easily cover with a duvet using built-in interior loops, which may elongate the blanket’s lifespan.

  • You can spend three days with your lovely or crawl under the duvet with Jeni’s ice cream and wait it out.

  • There was never a rule book for writing Sleep Stories–my techniques started with intuition and the drive to try to create something that I would like to have read to me when I was snuggled up in bed, surrounded by the warmth of my duvet.

  • I pulled my duvet up to my chin and felt the mattress shaping to my body.

  • One look resembled a duvet cover thrown around the shoulders like a long cape.

  • A tube of lubricant also flew into the stalls as a duvet was swiftly scooped up.

  • The Dior dress Lawrence donned at the Globes bears a strong resemblance to a duvet cover accented with black tape.

  • But they believed, too, that Knox and Sollecito took pity on her later by covering her with a duvet.

  • But she improved it: "You must have it after you're in bed, and you must have my duvet."

  • Owen took his customary place by Madame Duvet, and played his usual game.

  • The only covering consisted of a single blanket, and the duvet or down pillow, always found upon the foot of continental beds.

  • He put his face down in her duvet and smelled the cotton covers and her nighttime sweat, like a spice, like cinnamon.

  • Madame Duvet says he's the handsomest man she ever saw, and that his beard is enough to win any woman's heart.'