bedspread

[bed-spred] /ˈbɛdˌsprɛd/
noun
1.
an outer covering, usually decorative, for a bed.
Origin
1835-45, Americanism; bed + spread
Examples from the web for bedspread
  • There's nothing fancy about the rooms, mainly done in pastels with floral bedspread.
  • Bed patients may be carried on a bedspread, blanket or sheet with the edges rolled as a stretcher by two people or dragged by one.
  • In the suspect's bedroom, the officer found a bedspread depicting a large eagle.
  • Fold the blankets and bedspread and leave on the foot of the bed.
  • The blood went around the bed and was also on the bedspread.
British Dictionary definitions for bedspread

bedspread

/ˈbɛdˌsprɛd/
noun
1.
a top cover on a bed over other bedclothes
Word Origin and History for bedspread
n.

also bed-spread, 1845, American English, from bed (n.) + spread (n.).

Encyclopedia Article for bedspread

top cover of a bed, put on for tidiness or display rather than warmth. Use of a bedspread is an extremely ancient custom, referred to in the earliest written sources, for example, the Bible: "I have decked my bed with coverings of tapestry" (Proverbs 7:16). The first bedcovers were probably of fur. Later versions included every sort of refinement that weaving or embroidery could produce. The Roman historian Livy wrote in the 1st century BC that luxury, including "valuable bed covers," was first brought to Rome by the armies of Asia. An English account of 1472 makes reference to a "counterpane cloth of gold furred with ermine," and there are many similar descriptions of bed coverings in medieval inventories.

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