Hoover-apron
[hoo-ver] /ˈhu vər/
noun
1.
a dresslike coverall for women that ties at the waist.
Read Also:
- Hoover-dam
noun 1. official name of . noun 1. a dam in the western US, on the Colorado River on the border between Nevada and Arizona; forms Lake Mead. Height: 222 m (727 ft). Length: 354 m (1180 ft) Former name (1933–47) Boulder Dam
- Hoovered
[hoo-ver] /ˈhu vər/ verb (used with object), (often initial capital letter) Chiefly British. 1. to clean with a vacuum cleaner. /ˈhuːvə/ noun 1. trademark a type of vacuum cleaner verb (usually not capital) 2. to vacuum-clean (a carpet, furniture, etc) 3. (transitive) often foll by up. to consume or dispose of (something) quickly and completely: […]
- Hoovering
[hoo-ver] /ˈhu vər/ verb (used with object), (often initial capital letter) Chiefly British. 1. to clean with a vacuum cleaner. /ˈhuːvə/ noun 1. trademark a type of vacuum cleaner verb (usually not capital) 2. to vacuum-clean (a carpet, furniture, etc) 3. (transitive) often foll by up. to consume or dispose of (something) quickly and completely: […]
- Hooverville
[hoo-ver-vil] /ˈhu vərˌvɪl/ noun 1. a collection of huts and shacks, as at the edge of a city, housing the unemployed during the 1930s. 1933, American English, from U.S. president Herbert C. Hoover (1874-1964), who was in office when the Depression began, + common place-name ending -ville. Earlier his name was the basis of Hooverize […]
- Hoovervilles
[hoo-ver-vil] /ˈhu vərˌvɪl/ noun 1. a collection of huts and shacks, as at the edge of a city, housing the unemployed during the 1930s. 1933, American English, from U.S. president Herbert C. Hoover (1874-1964), who was in office when the Depression began, + common place-name ending -ville. Earlier his name was the basis of Hooverize […]