ˈrough-dry, v.
[rough adv.]
trans. To dry (clothes) without smoothing or ironing. Now more generally, to dry roughly or imperfectly.
| 1837 Dickens Pickw. xvii, The process of being washed in the night-air, and rough-dried in a close closet. 1978 P. Harcourt Agents of Influence xii. 146 She..continued to rough-dry her hair on the towel. |
Hence ˈrough-dried ppl. a., ˈrough-dry a.
| 1856 Mrs. Stowe Dred I. 181 Clothes look rough-dry, as if they had been pulled out of a bag. 1865 M. Eyre Lady's Walks S. of France i. 8 The articles..are neither starched nor ironed, but simply sent home rough dry. 1890 Cent. Dict., Rough-dry, dry but not smoothed or ironed: as, rough-dry clothes. 1900 Kipling in Daily Express 12 June 4/5 Sweating men, rough-dried sweating horses with wisps of precious forage. 1942 Z. N. Hurston in A. Dundes Mother Wit (1973) 222/1 He was born with this rough-dried hair. 1952 ‘J. Tey’ Singing Sands i. 8 Service..had lost its starch and its high glaze. It had become what housewives call rough-dried. |