a person employed to dress actors, care for costumes, etc., at a theater, television studio, or the like.
Chiefly British. a surgeon's assistant.
a person who dresses in a particular manner, as specified: a fancy dresser; a careful and distinctive dresser.
any of several tools or devices used in dressing materials.
Metalworking.
a block, fitting into an anvil, on which pieces are forged.
a mallet for shaping sheet metal.
a tool for truing the surfaces of grinding wheels.
Origin of dresser
1
1400–50; late Middle English: guide. See dress, -er1
Words nearby dresser
dress coat, dress code, dress-down, dress-down Friday, dressed to kill, dresser, dresser set, dress form, dress goods, dressing, dressing case
Definition for dresser (2 of 2)
dresser2
[ dres-er ]
/ ˈdrɛs ər /
noun
a dressing table or bureau.
a sideboard or set of shelves for dishes and cooking utensils.
Obsolete. a table or sideboard on which food is dressed for serving.
Origin of dresser
2
1375–1425; Middle English dresso(u)r sideboard <Anglo-French; Middle French dresseur,Old French dreceor(e), equivalent to dreci(er) to dress + -ore-ory2 (French dressoir)