What do dream about dress really mean?

Search results for dress:

Dress

… of dressing: make you prepared for annoying impositions.

* Please, see meaning of undress, dress.

Explanation & Definition:

Short explanation

The activity of getting dressed.

Synonyms of dress

verb: clothe, robe; noun: clothes, clothing, garb, attire, garment, costume, apparel, gown, raiment, wear, frock, robe; plural: clothes, clothings, garbs, attires, garments, costumes, apparels, gowns, raiments, wears, frocks, robes; related terms: primp, preen, dress, …

Tree

… sour, and ill advised by a bad guy in serious trouble if the apple has been very upset.

- If his dress is stuck in the spines of the pomegranate tree and torn, the dreamer will litigate with a wealthy, it seems to him, he was breaking off the branch on which he caught, he will win the case.

- Anybody rises to an olive tree and olive picks, he is a man who is usually cheerful and kind, are treated badly, because the olive has an astringent effect.

- He will eat also of the olives, he will …

Bandage

… situation demands, using clothing, blankets or other material.

Synonyms of bandage

verb: dress, swathe, bind; noun: dressing, swathe, band; plural: dressings, swathes, bands; related terms: patch, adhesive bandage, capeline bandage, plaster bandage, plaster cast, cast, compression bandage, tourniquet, medical dressing, dressing, elastic bandage, four-tailed bandage, gauze, gauze bandage, immovable bandage, oblique bandage, roller bandage, scarf bandage, triangular bandage, sling, …

Band

… are a form of formal neckwear, worn by some clergy and lawyers, and with some forms of academic dress. They take the form of two oblong pieces of cloth, usually though not invariably white, which are tied to the neck. Bands is usually plural because they require two similar parts and did not come as one piece of cloth. Those worn by clergy are often called preaching bands, tabs or Geneva bands; those worn by lawyers are called barrister’s bands or, more usually in Canada, tabs. …

Berate

… chide, upbraid, rebuke, rate, rail; related terms: call on the carpet, chew out, chew up, chide, dress down, have words, bawl out, rebuke, reproof, scold, take to task, call down, lambast, lambaste, lecture, reprimand, remonstrate, trounce, jaw, rag, castigate, chasten, chastise, objurgate, correct.

Array

… of objects, usually in rows and columns.

Synonyms of array

verb: arrange, adorn, dress, decorate, range; noun: order; plural: orders; related terms: arrangement, table, tabular array, matrix, row, column, panoply, bank, spectrum, display, raiment, regalia, article of clothing, clothing, habiliment, wearable, vesture, wear.

Sleeve

… the arm passes or slips. The pattern of the sleeve is one of the characteristics of fashion in dress, varying in every country and period. Various survivals of the early forms of sleeve are still found in the different types of academic or other robes. Where the long hanging sleeve is worn it has, as still in China and Japan, been used as a pocket, whence has come the phrase to have up one’s sleeve, to have something concealed ready to produce. There are many other proverbial and …

Suit

… still worn today are the dinner suit, part of black tie, which arose as a lounging alternative to dress coats in much the same way as the day lounge suit came to replace frock coats and morning coats; and, rarely worn today, the morning suit. This article discusses the lounge suit (including business suits), elements of informal dress code.

Synonyms of suit

verb: fit, become, match, adapt, adjust, befit, accommodate; noun: costume, petition, lawsuit, set; plural: costumes, petitions, …

Put on

… location; set.

Synonyms of put on

verb: don, get into, wear, assume; related terms: dress, get dressed, hat, try on, try, scarf, slip on.

Abbess

… as a symbol of office, though she continues to wear a modified form of her religious habit or dress, as she is unordained- not a male religious- and so does not vest or use choir dress in the liturgy.

Abbesses are, like abbots, major superiors according to canon law, the equivalents of abbots or bishops (the ordained male members of the church hierarchy who have, by right of their own office, executive jurisdiction over a building, diocesan territory, or a communal or non-communal group …