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Laundry   /lˈɔndri/   Listen
Laundry

noun
(pl. laundries)
1.
Garments or white goods that can be cleaned by laundering.  Synonyms: wash, washables, washing.
2.
Workplace where clothes are washed and ironed.



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"Laundry" Quotes from Famous Books



... groves were God's first temples" as I beheld the high mountains, covered with pines and chaparral, the sparkling waterfalls dashing down the mountain side; the cottages here and there on the level parts of the rocky steeps; the long building for the dining hall; the laundry building, and below the dam, the row of white buildings and corrals for the cows and horses connected with the dairy conducted ...
— Sixty Years of California Song • Margaret Blake-Alverson

... upstairs behind the silent, felt-shod Asiatic, and wondered what was coming next. I had hitherto associated Chinamen in Australia exclusively with market-gardening and laundry work. The house was not a very high one, but it really was its 'top-side' we walked to, and, arrived there, I was shown into what I thought must certainly be the largest and most magnificent apartment ...
— The Record of Nicholas Freydon - An Autobiography • A. J. (Alec John) Dawson

... was the Swiss village, of which Louis XVI. had been the miller, the Count of Provence the schoolmaster, the Count of Artois the gamekeeper, the village with its merry mill, the dairy where the cream filled porphyry vessels on marble tables, the laundry where the clothes were beaten with ebony sticks, the granary to which led mahogany ladders, the sheep-house where the sheep were shorn with golden shears. They saw once more the grass sprinkled with flowers, the clear water, the trees of all colors from dark green to cherry-red; larches ...
— The Happy Days of the Empress Marie Louise • Imbert De Saint-Amand

... continued, but with so little confidence that a hundred yards further on I stopped another wayfarer, who, however, had no knowledge of any Hogarth but a local laundry of that name, and could not ...
— Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. CL, April 26, 1916 • Various

... we will leave out the picnic. I might get Luella to stay afternoons sometimes, but you know she goes home to help her mother, for Mrs. Barnes has more laundry work than she can do, and Luella has to help her when she can; those were the only terms upon which she would consent to come to me; so you see ...
— Three Little Cousins • Amy E. Blanchard


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