Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It is a chiffonnier, a chest of drawers used by women to store jewelry, sewing, letters and clothes.
At the same moment down came three or four bottles from the chiffonnier and shot a web of pungency into the air of the room.
Lacy silk underthings tumble in messy profusion from the hastily slammed drawers of a towering chiffonnier.
Le chiffonnier is a 1896 French short black-and-white silent film directed by Georges Méliès.
Le chiffonnier, l'Ange et le Petit Bossu.
"Nureyev, Gore Vidal, Princess Margaret" -Mark ambled over to the large Victorian chiffonnier and tugged open the door.
A Victorian four door carved back chiffonnier made £800; a reproduction inlaid cylinder top writing bureau £725 and a set of 14 Victorian dining room chairs, £700.
You will find rubbers in the front hall by that thing which has the umbrellas in it, chiffonnier, I think they call it, or pergola, or something like that.
A Rag-picker, or Chiffonnier, was a 19th- and early 20th-century term for someone who made a living by rummaging through refuse in the streets to collect material for salvage.
In the like character of literary chiffonnier, he prepared editions in the same year of the Juvenilia of Longfellow and Moore; and Sultan Stork, a volume of juvenile pieces by Thackeray, in 1887.
The clothes are safe in a new chiffonier and here's the key.
He went to the chiffonier and began opening the drawers.
"Your exam paper is on my chiffonier over there," he said.
"Well, there was the collar and the tie on the chiffonier."
He went shaking to Brian's room and put the key of the chiffonier in his pocket.
I sneaked a look to see what he was fiddling around with on my chiffonier.
There was a cottage-piano, and a chiffonier several sizes too large for the room.
From the chiffonier had gone the knick-knacks of silver and plate.
The term itself is a portmanteau of the words chiffonier and wardrobe.
There was nothing under the bed, nothing stashed behind the chiffonier.
An exquisitely delicate chiffonier was on the other side.
Morel found the photograph standing on the chiffonier in the parlour.
And to whom does that handsome chiffonier downstairs belong?
Mr. Micawber had a few books on a little chiffonier, which he called the library; and those went first.
To her dismay, she saw two cots set up on the porch and an old chiffonier, clearly intended for them.
Good furniture: an antique chiffonier, a pair of sturdy oak chairs.
To see or search through a chiffonier, denotes you will have disappointing anticipations.
A chiffonier was beyond the window, and English Johnny used its high surface as a writing desk.
He was still searching through the chiffonier.
He was standing by the chiffonier, still naked, and at this, he turned half-round to face me.
The room was furnished with a bed, chiffonier, a desk for a dressing table, and two red plastic-covered chairs.
Maurice's pistol, a small one, was kept in a locked drawer high in a chiffonier.
At the same moment down came three or four bottles from the chiffonier and shot a web of pungency into the air of the room.
A huge armoire and its matching chiffonier stood at one side, a dressing table at the other.
There was a chiffonier, matching bed-tables, a dressing table with a round mirror set between banks of drawers.