closet
See also: clóset
English
Etymology
From Middle English closet, from Old French closet, from clos (“private area”) + -et (“forming diminutives”), from Latin clausum. Equivalent to close + -et, but generally applied in French solely to small open-air enclosures.[1]
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈklɒzɪt/
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈklɑzɪt/
Audio (US) (file) - Rhymes: -ɒzɪt
Noun
closet (plural closets)
- (obsolete) Any private area, particularly bowers in the open air.
- (now rare) Any private or inner room, particularly:
- Goldsmith
- a chair-lumbered closet, just twelve feet by nine
- (obsolete) A private room used by women to groom and dress themselves.
- (archaic) A private room used for prayer or other devotions.
- (figuratively, archaic) A place of (usually fanciful) contemplation and theorizing.
- a. 1600, Robert Hooker, Of Lawes Eccl. and Politie, Ch. vii, § 24:
- ...abroad and at home, at their Tables or in their Closets...
- a. 1600, Robert Hooker, Of Lawes Eccl. and Politie, Ch. vii, § 24:
- (archaic) The private residence or private council chamber of a monarch.
- Goldsmith
- (obsolete) A pew or side-chapel reserved for a monarch or other feudal lord.
- A private cabinet, particularly:
- (obsolete) One used to store valuables.
- 1599, William Shakespeare, The Tragedie of Iulius Cæsar, Act III, Scene ii, l. 130:
- (archaic) One used to store curiosities.
- 1659, Elias Ashmole, Diary, p. 326:
- Mr. Tradescant and his wife told me they had been long considering upon whom to bestow their closet of curiosities when they died.
- 1681, Marquis of Halifax, Seasonable Addresses to the Houses of Parliament in Concise Succession, p. 10:
- The late House of Commons have... seiz'd Closets and Writings without Information.
- 1659, Elias Ashmole, Diary, p. 326:
- (now chiefly US) One used to store food or other household supplies: a cupboard.
- 1799 May 17, Jane Austen, letter:
- (figuratively) A secret or hiding place, particularly the hiding place in English idioms such as in the closet and skeleton in the closet.
- 1530, Myroure of Oure Ladye, Ch. ii, p. 233:
- The closet can be a scary place for a gay teenager.
- He's so far in the closet, he can see Narnia.
- (obsolete) One used to store valuables.
- (now chiefly Scotland, Ireland) Any small room or side-room, particularly:
- (US) One intended for storing clothes or bedclothes.
- (obsolete) Clipping of closet of ease or later (Britain) water closet: a room containing a toilet.
- (heraldry) An ordinary similar to a bar but half as broad.
- (Scotland, obsolete) A sewer.
Synonyms
- (place of fanciful theorization): armchair
- (furniture or shelving used for storage): See cabinet
- (room with a toilet): See Thesaurus:bathroom
Hyponyms
- (A small closet with built-in lock): locker
- (A small room used for storage): walk-in closet, storage room
- (A storage area set into a wall, used for storing food or dishware): cupboard, pantry, larder, cabinet
- (A piece of furniture, used for storing clothes): wardrobe, armoire, press (Irish & Scots)
- (A piece of furniture, used for storing food or dishware): cupboard, sideboard, cabinet, press (Irish & Scots), wardrobe (UK)
Derived terms
Derived terms
- bed-closet
- chemical closet
- Clerk of the Closet, clerk of the closet
- closet candlestick, closet-candlestick
- closet case
- closet-chapel
- closet-chaplain
- closet-devotion
- closet-door
- closet-draught
- closet of ease
- closet of the heart
- closet-help
- closet-keeper
- closet-lucubration
- closet-meditation
- closet-philosopher
- closet picture, closet-picture
- closet politician, closet-politician
- closet-prayer
- closet-preparation
- closet-reasoner
- closet-religion
- closet-speculation
- closet-student
- closet-study
- closet-vow
- closetwork, closet-work
- come out of the closet
- earth closet
- glass closet
- in the closet
- skeleton in the closet
- water closet, water-closet, WC
Translations
furniture
|
|
small private chamber
toilet — see toilet
Adjective
closet (not comparable)
- (obsolete) Private.
- Secret, especially with reference to gay people who are in the closet; closeted.
- He's a closet case.
- 1940, Walton Hall Smith, Liquor, the servant of man:
- I wonder if there is another in the world that could produce, among perfectly normal people, this strangest quirk in the agenda of liquordom, the closet drinker.
See also
Verb
closet (third-person singular simple present closets, present participle closeting, simple past and past participle closeted)
- (transitive) To shut away for private discussion.
- The ambassador has been closeted with the prime minister all afternoon. We're all worried what will be announced when they exit.
- (transitive) To put into a private place for a secret interview or interrogation.
- (transitive) To shut up in, or as in, a closet for concealment or confinement.
- 1784, William Cowper, Tirocinium, or A Review of Schools,
- See what contempt is fallen on human kind; […] See Bedlam's closeted and handcuff'd charge / Surpass'd in frenzy by the mad at large;
- 1992, Toni Morrison, Jazz, p. 55,
- […] she had to look twice over her shoulder when the Gay Northeasters and the City Belles strolled down Seventh Avenue, they were so handsome. But this envy-streaked pleasure Alice closeted, and never let the girl see how she admired those ready-for-bed-in-the-street clothes.
- 1784, William Cowper, Tirocinium, or A Review of Schools,
Derived terms
- closeted
- closet oneself
See also
References
- Oxford English Dictionary. "closet, n."
Old French
Romanian
Etymology
From English (water) closet.
Welsh
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈklɔsɛt/
Alternative forms
Etymology 2
Inflected form of cloi.
Alternative forms
- cloet (colloquial)
- cloit (literary)
Mutation
Welsh mutation | |||
---|---|---|---|
radical | soft | nasal | aspirate |
closet | gloset | nghloset | chloset |
Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every possible mutated form of every word actually occurs. |
References
- R. J. Thomas, G. A. Bevan, P. J. Donovan, A. Hawke et al., editors (1950-), “closet”, in Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru Online (in Welsh), University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh & Celtic Studies
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