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English

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Noun

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house-slipper (plural house-slippers)

  1. Alternative form of house slipper
    • 1912, New Zealand. Parliament. House of Representatives, Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives of New Zealand, page 238:
      If a woman wants a velvet house-slipper such as we formerly sold at 1s. 3d. per pair, she has now to be satisfied with an inferior-wearing article for the same price, as the 1907 tariff put 6d. fixed duty on a velvet slipper, thus adding about 50 per cent.
    • 2005, Lawrence Grossberg, Janice Radway, Andrew Tolson, Cultural Studies: Volume 4 - Issue 2, →ISBN:
      It will be found amost comfortable plan to take with one a pair of house-slippers (p.176).
    • 2006, Carolyn Parkhurst, Lost and Found: A Novel, →ISBN:
      We take off the little house-slipper things they gave us and put on our shoes.
    • 2014, Zahn Pesh, The Duology, →ISBN:
      Billy was dressed in his black, shiny, satin-like windbreaker, with, on the back in cursive script, the words "Sweet William," in a garish yellow iridescent paint, that shined ghostly in black lights; in his new, red San Fancisco 49ers Five Time Superbowl Champions t-shirt; in a pair of faded levi 501 cutoffs that showed his knobby knees and the scars on his legs; and in the leather sole and stretchy leather lashes of wimpy house-slipper sandals.