Dictionary Definition
couch
Noun
2 a flat coat of paint or varnish used by artists
as a primer
3 a narrow bed on which a patient lies during
psychiatric or psychoanalytic treatment v : formulate in a
particular style or language; "I wouldn't put it that way"; "She
cast her request in very polite language" [syn: frame, redact, cast, put]
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
Synonyms
- italbrac item of furniture: davenport, divan, settee, sofa
Translations
furniture for seating
See also
Verb
Translations
lie down (on a couch)
- Danish: lægge sig
- French: s'allonger (sur un sofa or sur un canapé)
- Italian: sdraiarsi (su un divano or'' su un sofa)
phrase in a particular style
Extensive Definition
A couch is an upholstered item of furniture for the comfortable
seating of more than one person and typically has an armrest on
either side. Couches are usually to be found in the living room,
den or the lounge. They
are covered in a variety of textiles or in leather.
The most common types of couches are the loveseat
(or British two-seater), the settee (2.5 seats), and the sofa (3
seats). A sectional sofa (often just referred to as a "sectional")
is formed from multiple sections (typically 2 to 4) and usually
includes at least two pieces that join at an angle of 90 degrees or
slightly greater.
Other couch variants include the divan,
the fainting
couch (backless or partial-backed), the chaise
longue (long with one armrest), the canapé
(an ornamental 3-seater), and the ottoman
(generally considered a footstool). To conserve space,
some sofas double as beds
(sofa-bed, daybed, or futon). There are also couches
known by genericized
trademarked names, such as a davenport
or chesterfield (named for the Earl
of Chesterfield).
A three-piece suite is composed of three couch
pieces (generally, a two- or three-seater and two armchairs).
History
Until the 20th century
a couch referred to a long upholstered seat with one end inclined,
high enough to provide a back and head-rest. "Couch" which in the
Late Middle Ages had signified bedding (from the French se coucher,
or "to lie down") was interchangeable with "daybed" through the 17th
century. (Gloag, "couch"). Well into the 19th century
a couch was particularly a seat for a lady; a fainting couch (a
modern term) has a back and a single scrolling upholstered end. A
récamier was a late nineteenth-century trade term for a similar
single-ended couch, such as the one made famous in David's
portrait of Mme Récamier (illustration, right).
The word couch is scarecely used in the United
Kindgom, where sofa is far more commonly used. The sopha or sofa
had a separate origin. "Sopha" made its entry in written English in
1717 (OED);
divan
preceded it (1702). Sofa was originally an Arabic word for the
raised section of floor, furnished with rugs and cushions, set
apart for a council (see Diwan) thus also for
especially esteemed guests. Designs for "sophas" in Thomas
Chippendale's Director (1754, 1762) all have solidly
upholstered arms with padded elbow rests, cushioned seats and
upholstered backs, but show their carved wood framing.
Further back in ancient Roman society, the couch
was found in the dining room (known as the triclinium). Three couches
would be arranged around a low table and the men would recline
while eating (although the women sat in normal chairs). Originally
it was an elitist piece
of furniture and it was not until industrialisation
that the upholstered couch became an indispensable item of
furniture in middle and
lower
class households.
Throughout its history it has often been an object of derision,
considered a variety of things from decadent to conformist. Since 19th
Century the couch has become associated with Freudian psychoanalysis. Sigmund
Freud originally used the couch as a tool to aid his hypnosis of the patient.
However when he moved on from hypnosis to
stream-of-consciousness discourse as his dominant mode of
analysis with the development of the interpretation
of dreams, he still held on to the couch. He justified this
with the need to limit the transference between
psychoanalyst and analysand. Thus, the couch proved particularly
useful because it limits the visibility of the analyst. Today the
couch is invariably linked to both domestic family life and television culture. Indeed, a
slogan used by IKEA home furnishings
was "Life happens on the sofa."http://www.ikea.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/IkeaNearYouView?storeId=12&langId=-1&StoreNumber=152
It is often positioned in relation to the television
set in a living room and for napping. It has spawned social
phenomena such as the couch
potato, a person who spends a lot of time watching the
television. The couch has also become the central prop
for many TV sitcoms and
soap
operas. This symbiosis, through which the
couch has shifted from the private to the public sphere, has been
satirically depicted in popular culture, in television series such
as Married...
with Children, The
Simpsons, The
Big Comfy Couch, Friends, The Royle
Family and Beavis
and Butt-head.
Developing
Sofa can be traced back to ancient Egypt of around 2000 BC, but true sofa was invented in the end of the 16th to the early 17th century.At that time, horse hair, bird feather, plant
villi such as natural flexible materials were made as the filler,
with the outside velvet, embroidery, or other fabrics masked, to
form a soft sofa surface.
At that time in Europe, the most popular
Farthingle chair is one of the earliest sofa chair.
1828, spring started to be one material in
sofa.
1904, Morris invented Pocket Spring, he grouped
Pocket Spring into sofa wooden framework to make sofa. it was
originator of modern spring sofa.
in the 1920s, Dunlop had created a new pad
technology–rubber foam. Filling the gas in the natural rubber
latex, forming into the mold and trying, at last he got a flexible
filler - rubber foam. The application of foam rubber greatly
simplified the process of filling masked, also had same appearance
and quality.
In the 1960s, people developed inflatable and
water cushion sofa success, which indicates the sofa manufacturing
technology was mature.
References
- John Gloag, A Short Dictionary of Furniture rev. ed. 1962. (London: Allen & Unwin)
See also
- The joiner's settle
External links
couch in Arabic: صفة (شريعة)
couch in Bavarian: Ottoman
couch in Czech: Gauč
couch in Danish: Sofa
couch in German: Sofa
couch in Spanish: Sofá
couch in Esperanto: Sofo
couch in French: Canapé
couch in Italian: Divano
couch in Dutch: Zitbank
couch in Dutch Low Saxon: Banke (meubel)
couch in Norwegian: Sofa
couch in Portuguese: Sofá
couch in Russian: Диван (мебель)
couch in Finnish: Sohva
couch in Swedish: Soffa
couch in Thai: โซฟา
couch in Chinese: 沙發
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
analysis, bear down, bed, bed down, bedstead, bring low, bunk, burrow, cave, conceive, couch in terms,
covert, crawl, creep, crouch, curl up, debase, den, depress, depth interview, depth
psychology, detrude,
divan, doss, downbear, dream analysis, dream
symbolism, earth, embed, embody in words, express, form, formularize, formulate, frame, give expression to, give
words to, go to bed, go to rest, group analysis, grovel, gumshoe, gurney, haul down, hole, hug the earth, indent, interpretation of dreams,
kip, lair, lay wait, let down, lie down,
lie in wait, lie low, lie prone, lie prostrate, lie under, litter, lodge, loll, lounge, lower, lurk, mew, nightwalk, paragraph, phrase, present, press down, prone, prostrate, prowl, psychanalysis, psychoanalysis,
psychoanalytic method, psychoanalytic therapy, psychognosis, psychognosy, psychology of
depths, pull down, push down, pussyfoot, put, put in words, recline, reduce, repose, rest, rhetorize, run, set out, settee, settle, settle to rest, shadow, sink, skulk, slink, sneak, snug down, sofa, sprawl, squat, stalk, state, steal, stretcher, style, supinate, take down, take it
easy, take life easy, tete-a-tete, the couch, the hay, the sack,
thrust down, tiptoe,
tunnel, underlie, vis-a-vis, word