elbow chair
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Noun
[edit]elbow chair (plural elbow chairs)
- A chair with long armrests for the elbows.
- 1723, Charles Walker, Memoirs of Sally Salisbury, section II:
- she was forc'd to go through the whole Operation of a Flux in an old Elbow-Chair which was plac'd just under the Jack, in the Kitchin.
- 1817 December 31 (indicated as 1818), [Walter Scott], chapter XII, in Rob Roy. […], volume I, Edinburgh: […] James Ballantyne and Co. for Archibald Constable and Co. […]; London: Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, →OCLC, page 293:
- […] Miss Vernon, seating herself majestically in a huge elbow-chair in the library, like a judge about to hear a cause of importance, signed to me to take a chair opposite to her, […]
- 2011, Alan Bennett, “Baffled at a Bookcase”, in London Review of Books, XXXIII.15:
- The reference library itself proclaimed the substance of the city with its solid elbow chairs and long mahogany tables, grooved along the edge to hold a pen, and in the centre of each table a massive pewter inkwell.