Carpet /(kär"pĕt)/
Car·pet
Carpet
n.
-
A heavy woven or felted fabric, usually of wool, but also of cotton, hemp, straw, etc.; esp. a floor covering made in breadths to be sewed together and nailed to the floor, as distinguished from a rug or mat; originally, also, a wrought cover for tables.
Tables and beds covered with copes instead of carpets and coverlets.
- A smooth soft covering resembling or suggesting a carpet.
Phrases & Compounds
- Carpet beetle
- a small beetle (Anthrenus scrophulariæ), which, in the larval state, does great damage to carpets and other woolen goods; -- also called buffalo bug.
- Carpet knight
- A knight who enjoys ease and security, or luxury, and has not known the hardships of the field; a hero of the drawing room; an effeminate person.
- Carpet moth
- the larva of an insect which feeds on carpets and other woolen goods. There are several kinds. Some are the larvæ of species of Tinea (as Tinea tapetzella); others of beetles, esp. Anthrenus.
- Carpet snake
- an Australian snake. See Diamond snake, under Diamond.
- Carpet sweeper
- an apparatus or device for sweeping carpets.
- To be on the carpet
- to be under consideration; to be the subject of deliberation; to be in sight; -- an expression derived from the use of carpets as table cover.
- Brussels carpet
- See under Brussels.
Carpet
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Carpeted; p. pr. & vb. n. Carpeting
-
To cover with, or as with, a carpet; to spread with carpets; to furnish with a carpet or carpets.
Carpeted temples in fashionable squares.