futon
noun
- traditional Japanese bedding
Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈfuːtɒn/ / /ˈfutɑn/
noun
Etymology: Borrowed from Japanese 布団 (futon), in turn from Middle Chinese 蒲團 (MC bu dwan, “meditation cushion”) (compare Mandarin 蒲团 (pútuán)), from 蒲 (bu, “bulrush, cattail”) + 團 (dwan, “sphere, round object”) from the way the original cushion was round and made from woven bulrushes.
- A thin mattress of tufted cotton or similar material, placed on a floor or on a raised, foldable frame as a bed.
“The Japanese bed is the floor, with a wooden box under the neck for a pillow and a futon for a covering. To the foreigner the Japanese landlord allows five or six futons, or cotton-wadded comforters, and they make a tolerable mattress, although not springy, and rather apt to be damp and musty.”
“The futon are easily aired, and may be carried about readily when moving.”
- A round cushion used for Zen meditation, traditionally made of woven bulrush leaves.
- A specific kind of sofa-bed, with a fixed cushion that forms a mattress when folded down and a sofa when folded up.
“I was 18 years old, sleeping on a futon, cooking on a George Foreman grill and showering at a friend's house every few days.”