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词汇 commode
释义

Definition of commode in English:

commode

noun kəˈməʊdkəˈmoʊd
  • 1A piece of furniture containing a concealed chamber pot.

    便桶箱

    Example sentencesExamples
    • She would be very upset because when she was bed-ridden I had to fight with social services for a commode.
    • The chairs become commodes, vessels for waste.
    • Since it is undesirable for the patient with fever to walk even as far as the toilet, a bed-pan or commode should be used.
    • The centre loans wheelchairs, commodes and other essential equipment to disabled and elderly people.
    • Down the years, there have been as many shapes and designs of chamber pots and commodes as there have been names.
    • You should make sure that getting to the toilet in a hurry is easy and perhaps consider having a commode in your bedroom.
    • Exertion on the part of the patient can be limited by providing a bedside commode, using a wheelchair for transport and avoiding exposure to hot, humid weather or extreme temperatures.
    • At some point, the chair was converted to a commode.
    • The rooms were well-furnished and had English commodes, bath-tubs and running water.
    • ‘The demand for items such as wheel chairs, walkers, commodes, crutches etc. continues,’ she reported.
    • There's a commode beside my bed, and that's as far from my bed as I get in an average day.
    • Surely he'd seen the commode in the corner of the dining room, because that thing was not completely hidden by the screen they had rigged up, no matter what Dottie said.
    • Always wash your hands after using the toilet or commode (many hospitals now routinely offer a hand-wipe).
    • A woman with impaired mobility could try changing the room arrangement to make it easier to get to the bathroom, add better lighting and grab bars to make the bathroom safer, or consider a bedside commode or female urinal.
    • These include home care products such as walking frames, commodes, wheel chairs and braces for physical injuries.
    1. 1.1North American A toilet.
      〈北美〉盥洗室
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I immediately sensed the room, and found it tiny, cramped, a bed and commode the only furnishings.
      • We live on the 16th floor of the tallest apartment block in Gabrovo where throughout the day, the aroma of 15 floors of collective gases from unflushed commodes waft upwards and emanate from our drains.
      • They heard the commode flush and the bathroom door open.
      • Suddenly I feel a not-so-urgent need to use the restroom; I wonder if Christina is on the commode.
      • The cleanest commodes tend to be those on construction sites and movie sets, because the people using them know they've got to use them again tomorrow.
      • With the commode finally secured and sealed, we proceeded to a higher level of suffering: reattaching the water fittings.
      • The wall-mounted commodes and lavatories provide comparable maintenance benefits.
      • ‘They've got the big fluffy towels,’ I whispered, looking at the array of them near the commode.
      • The cell has a bunk, a commode, a small sink, a light for reading, and a little window.
      • A paneled half-wall divides the commode from the shower; a recessed cabinet provides storage for towels and soaps.
    2. 1.2North American historical A movable washstand.
      〈北美,史〉活动脸盆架,盥洗台
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Later, my father got a toilet put in, a commode, but no bathtub.
      • Someone should stay with your child while in the bathroom, or when up to the commode.
  • 2A chest of drawers or chiffonier of a decorative type popular in the 18th century.

    五斗橱;小衣柜;(18世纪流行的装饰性的)西洋梳镜柜,高衣橱

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Neoclassical commodes, desks, and some chairs had fluted tapered legs reminiscent of upside-down obelisks.
    • The rest of the furniture included a commode, two small pairs of open china cabinets, eight fretwork armchairs, four side chairs, and a pier glass.
    • Its shape recalls French commodes of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and the metal frame is treated almost like turned wood, with its fluted spindle-shaped legs.
    • The inside of the same commode shows that the interior is highly polished which would not appear on an original 18th century original.
    • This copy of a Louis XVI commode was made by one of Europe's finest cabinetmakers, Francois Linke.
    • Master cabinetmakers fashioned a low chest of drawers, which differed from the bureau commode, or large table with drawers, that was crafted in the baroque period.
    • Unlike a table or commode, however, it is rather difficult to place in a house: you either have the right wall or you don't.
    • To put a finer point on this subject, a commode of the 1860-80 period is larger and of far better quality.
    • Certainly, there was no lack of cosy confusion in the library, where books were casually piled on tables, commodes, and footstools and were hardly more orderly on the shelves.
    • Its stylish catalogues are full of mahogany commodes, solid sideboards and muscular chests.

Origin

Mid 18th century (in sense 2): from French, literally 'convenient, suitable', from Latin commodus. sense 1 dates from the early 19th century.

  • accommodate from mid 16th century:

    The source of accommodate is Latin accommodare ‘make fitting, fit one thing to another’, formed from commodus ‘fit’. It came into English with the basic Latin sense, and through the idea of finding something that fitted someone's needs, had developed the sense of ‘provide lodgings for’ by the early 18th century. Latin commodus is also the base of commode (mid 18th century) something ‘fit, convenient’, and originally used of a chest of drawers before becoming a seat containing a chamber pot in the early 19th century and of commodity (Late Middle English) originally something useful.

Rhymes

abode, bestrode, bode, code, corrode, download, encode, erode, explode, forebode, goad, implode, load, lode, middle-of-the-road, mode, node, ode, offload, outrode, road, rode, sarod, Spode, strode, toad, upload, woad

Definition of commode in US English:

commode

nounkəˈmoʊdkəˈmōd
  • 1A piece of furniture containing a concealed chamber pot.

    便桶箱

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The rooms were well-furnished and had English commodes, bath-tubs and running water.
    • Since it is undesirable for the patient with fever to walk even as far as the toilet, a bed-pan or commode should be used.
    • You should make sure that getting to the toilet in a hurry is easy and perhaps consider having a commode in your bedroom.
    • The centre loans wheelchairs, commodes and other essential equipment to disabled and elderly people.
    • ‘The demand for items such as wheel chairs, walkers, commodes, crutches etc. continues,’ she reported.
    • Surely he'd seen the commode in the corner of the dining room, because that thing was not completely hidden by the screen they had rigged up, no matter what Dottie said.
    • Always wash your hands after using the toilet or commode (many hospitals now routinely offer a hand-wipe).
    • She would be very upset because when she was bed-ridden I had to fight with social services for a commode.
    • The chairs become commodes, vessels for waste.
    • Down the years, there have been as many shapes and designs of chamber pots and commodes as there have been names.
    • Exertion on the part of the patient can be limited by providing a bedside commode, using a wheelchair for transport and avoiding exposure to hot, humid weather or extreme temperatures.
    • These include home care products such as walking frames, commodes, wheel chairs and braces for physical injuries.
    • There's a commode beside my bed, and that's as far from my bed as I get in an average day.
    • A woman with impaired mobility could try changing the room arrangement to make it easier to get to the bathroom, add better lighting and grab bars to make the bathroom safer, or consider a bedside commode or female urinal.
    • At some point, the chair was converted to a commode.
    1. 1.1North American A toilet.
      〈北美〉盥洗室
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The cell has a bunk, a commode, a small sink, a light for reading, and a little window.
      • We live on the 16th floor of the tallest apartment block in Gabrovo where throughout the day, the aroma of 15 floors of collective gases from unflushed commodes waft upwards and emanate from our drains.
      • The wall-mounted commodes and lavatories provide comparable maintenance benefits.
      • ‘They've got the big fluffy towels,’ I whispered, looking at the array of them near the commode.
      • Suddenly I feel a not-so-urgent need to use the restroom; I wonder if Christina is on the commode.
      • The cleanest commodes tend to be those on construction sites and movie sets, because the people using them know they've got to use them again tomorrow.
      • I immediately sensed the room, and found it tiny, cramped, a bed and commode the only furnishings.
      • A paneled half-wall divides the commode from the shower; a recessed cabinet provides storage for towels and soaps.
      • They heard the commode flush and the bathroom door open.
      • With the commode finally secured and sealed, we proceeded to a higher level of suffering: reattaching the water fittings.
    2. 1.2North American historical A movable washstand.
      〈北美,史〉活动脸盆架,盥洗台
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Later, my father got a toilet put in, a commode, but no bathtub.
      • Someone should stay with your child while in the bathroom, or when up to the commode.
  • 2A chest of drawers or chiffonier of a decorative type popular in the 18th century.

    五斗橱;小衣柜;(18世纪流行的装饰性的)西洋梳镜柜,高衣橱

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Its shape recalls French commodes of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, and the metal frame is treated almost like turned wood, with its fluted spindle-shaped legs.
    • Master cabinetmakers fashioned a low chest of drawers, which differed from the bureau commode, or large table with drawers, that was crafted in the baroque period.
    • Unlike a table or commode, however, it is rather difficult to place in a house: you either have the right wall or you don't.
    • To put a finer point on this subject, a commode of the 1860-80 period is larger and of far better quality.
    • The inside of the same commode shows that the interior is highly polished which would not appear on an original 18th century original.
    • This copy of a Louis XVI commode was made by one of Europe's finest cabinetmakers, Francois Linke.
    • Its stylish catalogues are full of mahogany commodes, solid sideboards and muscular chests.
    • Certainly, there was no lack of cosy confusion in the library, where books were casually piled on tables, commodes, and footstools and were hardly more orderly on the shelves.
    • The rest of the furniture included a commode, two small pairs of open china cabinets, eight fretwork armchairs, four side chairs, and a pier glass.
    • Neoclassical commodes, desks, and some chairs had fluted tapered legs reminiscent of upside-down obelisks.

Origin

Mid 18th century (in commode (sense 2)): from French, literally ‘convenient, suitable’, from Latin commodus. commode (sense 1) dates from the early 19th century.

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