featherbed
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See also: feather-bed and feather bed
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]featherbed (plural featherbeds)
- A mattress stuffed with feathers.
- (especially UK, Dartmoor) An area of bog where a layer of moss covers a pool of water or mud, presenting a hazard to walkers who may fall through it. (Also in UK and Irish placenames.)
- Coordinate terms: quaking bog, quagmire
- 2014 March 17, Laurie R. King, The Mary Russell Series Books 1-4: The Beekeeper's Apprentice; A Monstrous Regiment of Women; A Letter of Mary; The Moor, Macmillan, →ISBN:
- There are mires, bogs, and 'featherbeds' or quaking bogs. With the first two, look for the tussocks of heavy grass or rushes around the edges, which offer a relatively firm footing, but if you see a stretch of bright green sphagnum moss, for God's sake stay away from it. The moss is a mat covering a pit of wet ooze; […]
- 2014 May 13, William Atkins, The Moor: Lives Landscape Literature, Faber & Faber, →ISBN:
- […] bog. The writers and the old fellows you meet in pubs will tell you to look out for grass or 'bright green areas', and to fear the land that looks the easiest; but bogs - 'featherbeds', the locals call them - might be marked […]
- 2023 March 28, Rebecca Schiller, A Thousand Ways to Pay Attention: Discovering the Beauty of My ADHD Mind - A Memoir, The Experiment, LLC, →ISBN:
- [...] a featherbed bog of moss and cotton grasses. Much of their effort has just burned away to nothing — the peat giving […]
Alternative forms
[edit]Translations
[edit]a mattress stuffed with feathers
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Verb
[edit]featherbed (third-person singular simple present featherbeds, present participle featherbedding, simple past and past participle featherbedded)
- (transitive) To treat someone with excessive indulgence; to pamper, cosset or mollycoddle.
- (intransitive) To engage in featherbedding; to employ more workers than necessary to fulfill a labor union requirement.