Dictionary Definition
chair
Noun
1 a seat for one person, with a support for the
back; "he put his coat over the back of the chair and sat
down"
2 the position of professor; "he was awarded an
endowed chair in economics" [syn: professorship]
3 the officer who presides at the meetings of an
organization; "address your remarks to the chairperson" [syn:
president, chairman, chairwoman, chairperson]
4 an instrument of execution by electrocution;
resembles a chair; "the murderer was sentenced to die in the chair"
[syn: electric
chair, death chair,
hot
seat]
Verb
1 act or preside as chair, as of an academic
department in a university; "She chaired the department for many
years" [syn: chairman]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- (UK) /ʧɛə(r)/
- (US) /ʧɐɹ/
Noun
- An item of furniture used to sit on or in comprising a seat, legs, back, and sometimes arm rests, for use by one person. Compare stool, couch, sofa, settee, loveseat and bench.
- (the chair) The electric chair.
- The seating position of a particular musician in an orchestra.
- Blocks that support and hold railroad track in position, and similar devices.
- Chairperson; a non-gender-specific form of chairman.
Derived terms
Translations
furniture
- Albanian: karrige
- Catalan: cadira
- Chinese: 椅子, 椅子 (yǐ zi)
- Czech: židle
- Dutch: stoel, zetel
- Finnish: tuoli
- French: chaise, fauteuil
- Galician: cadeira
- German: Stuhl
- Greek: καρέκλα (karékla)
- Hungarian: szék
- Irish: cathaoir
- Italian: sedia
- Japanese: 椅子 (いす, isu)
- Norwegian: stol
- Occitan: cadièra
- Polish: krzesło
- Russian: стул
- Slovene: stol
- Swedish: stol
- Vietnamese: ghế
chairperson
- Finnish: puheenjohtaja
- German: Vorsitzender
- Swedish: ordförande
- ttbc Afrikaans: stoel
- ttbc Arabic: (kursīy)
- ttbc Bavarian: Stui, Sässl
- ttbc Bulgarian: стол (stol)
- ttbc Catalan: cadira , seient
- ttbc Esperanto: seĝo (1), prezidanto (2)
- Greek, Ancient: ΚΑΘΕΔΡΑ
- ttbc Hebrew: כיסא (kise')
- ttbc Ido: stulo
- ttbc Indonesian: kursi, tempat duduk
- ttbc Interlingua: sede, cathedra
- ttbc Korean: 의자
- ttbc Latin: cathedra
- ttbc Malaysian: kerusi, tempat duduk
- ttbc Malayalam: (kasera)
- ttbc Portuguese: cadeira
- ttbc Romanian: scaun
- ttbc Scottish Gaelic: cathair
- ttbc Spanish: asiento , silla
- ttbc Swahili: kiti
- ttbc Telugu: కుర్చీ (kurchee)
Verb
- To act as chairperson.
- Bob will chair tomorrow's meeting.
Translations
French
Etymology
caro.Pronunciation
- /ʃɛʁ/
Noun
fr-noun fExtensive Definition
otherusesof chair
A chair is a kind of furniture for sitting, consisting of a back,
and sometimes arm rests, commonly for use by one person. Chairs
also often have four legs to support the seat raised above the
floor. Without back and arm rests it is called a stool. A chair for
more than one person is a couch, sofa, settee,
loveseat, recliner
or bench.
A separate footrest for a chair is known as an ottoman,
hassock or pouffe. A
chair mounted in a vehicle or in a theater is simply called a seat.
Chairs as furniture typically can be moved. The back often does not
extend all the way to the seat to allow for ventilation. Likewise,
the back and sometimes the seat are made of porous materials or
have holes drilled in them for decoration and ventilation.
The back may extend above the height of the head.
There may be separate headrests. Headrests for seats in vehicles
are important for preventing whiplash
injuries to the neck when the vehicle is involved in a rear-end
collision.
History of the chair
The chair is of extreme antiquity. Although for many centuries and indeed for thousands of years it was an article of state and dignity rather than an article of ordinary use. "The chair" is still extensively used as the emblem of authority in the House of Commons in the United Kingdom and Canada, and in public meetings. It was not, in fact, until the 16th century that it became common anywhere. The chest, the bench and the stool were until then the ordinary seats of everyday life, and the number of chairs which have survived from an earlier date is exceedingly limited; most of such examples are of ecclesiastical or seigneurial origin. Our knowledge of the chairs of remote antiquity is derived almost entirely from monuments, sculpture and paintings. A few actual examples exist in the British Museum, in the Egyptian Museum at Cairo, and elsewhere. In ancient Egypt chairs appear to have been of great richness and splendor. Fashioned of ebony and ivory, or of carved and gilded wood, they were covered with costly materials, magnificent patterns and supported upon representations of the legs of beasts or the figures of captives. The earliest known form of Greek chair, going back to five or six centuries BCE, had a back but stood straight up, front and back. During Tang dynasty (618 - 907 AD), a higher seat first started to appear amongst the Chinese elite and their usage soon spread to all levels of society. By the 12th century seating on the floor was rare in China, unlike in other Asian countries where the custom continued, and the chair, or more commonly the stool, was used in the vast majority of houses throughout the country.In Europe, it was owing in great measure to the
Renaissance
that the chair ceased to be a privilege of state, and became a
standard item of furniture whoever could afford to buy it. Once the
idea of privilege faded the chair speedily came into general use.
We find almost at once that the chair began to change every few
years to reflect the fashions of the hour.
The 20th century saw an increasing use of
technology in chair construction with such things as all-metal
folding chairs, metal-legged chairs, the Slumber
Chair, moulded plastic chairs and ergonomic chairs. The
recliner became a popular form, at least in part due to radio and
television, and later a two-part. The modern movement of the
1960s
produced new forms of chairs: the butterfly
chair, bean
bags, and the egg-shaped pod chair.
Technological advances led to molded plywood and wood laminate chairs, as well as
chairs made of leather
or polymers. Mechanical
technology incorporated into the chair enabled adjustable chairs,
especially for office use.
Motors embedded in the chair resulted in massage
chairs.
Design and ergonomics
Chair design considers intended usage, ergonomics (how comfortable it is for the occupant), as well as non-ergonomic functional requirements such as size, stack ability, fold ability, weight, durability, stain resistance and artistic design. Intended usage determines the desired seating position. "Task chairs", or any chair intended for people to work at a desk or table, including dining chairs, can only recline very slightly; otherwise the occupant is too far away from the desk or table. Dental chairs are necessarily reclined. Easy chairs for watching television or movies are somewhere in between depending on the height of the screen.Ergonomic design distributes the weight of the
occupant to various parts of the body. A seat
that is higher results in dangling feet and increased pressure on
the underside of the knees ("popliteal
fold"). It may also result in no weight on the feet which means
more weight elsewhere. A lower seat may shift too much weight to
the "seat bones" ("ischial
tuberosities").
A reclining seat and back will shift weight to
the occupant's back. This may be more comfortable for some in
reducing weight on the seat area, but may be problematic for others
who have bad backs. In general, if the occupant is suppose to sit
for a long time, weight needs to be taken off the seat area and
thus "easy" chairs intended for long periods of sitting are
generally at least slightly reclined. However, reclining may not be
suitable for chairs intended for work or eating at table.
The back of the chair will support some of the
weight of the occupant, reducing the weight on other parts of the
body. In general, backrests come in three heights: Lower back
backrests support only the lumbar region. Shoulder height
backrests support the entire back and shoulders. Headrests support
the head as well and are important in vehicles for preventing
"whiplash"
neck injuries in rear-end collisions where the head is jerked back
suddenly. Reclining
chairs typically have at least shoulder height backrests to
shift weight to the shoulders instead of just the lower
back.
Some chairs have foot rests. A stool or other
simple chair may have a simple straight or curved bar near the
bottom for the sitter to place his/her feet on.
A kneeling
chair adds an additional body part, the knees, to support the
weight of the body. A sit-stand chair distributes most of the
weight of the occupant to the feet. Many chairs are padded or have
cushions. Padding can be
on the seat of the chair only, on the seat and back, or also on any
arm rests and/or foot rest the chair may have. Padding will not
shift the weight to different parts of the body (unless the chair
is so soft that the shape is altered). However, padding does
distribute the weight by increasing the area of contact between the
chair and the body. A hard wood chair feels hard because the
contact point between the occupant and the chair is small. The same
body weight over a smaller area means greater pressure on that
area. Spreading the area reduces the pressure at any given point.
In lieu of padding, flexible materials, such as wicker, may be used
instead with similar effects of distributing the weight. Since most
of the body weight is supported in the back of the seat, padding
there should be firmer than the front of the seat which only has
the weight of the legs to support. Chairs that have padding that is
the same density front and back will feel soft in the back area and
hard to the underside of the knees.
There may be cases where padding is not
desirable. For example, in chairs that are intended primarily for
outdoor use. Where padding is not desirable, contouring may be used
instead. A contoured seat pan attempts to distribute weight without
padding. By matching the shape of the occupant's buttocks, weight is distributed
and maximum pressure is reduced. Actual chair dimensions are
determined by measurements of the human body or anthropometric
measurements. The two most relevant anthropometric measurement for
chair design is the popliteal
height and buttock
popliteal length.
For someone seated, the popliteal height is the
distance from the underside of the foot to the underside of the
thigh at the knees. It is sometimes called the "stool height". (The
term "sitting height" is reserved for the height to the top of the
head when seated.) For American men, the median popliteal height is
16.3 inches and for American women it is 15.0 incheshttp://www.cdc.gov/niosh/pot_anth.html.
The popliteal height, after adjusting for heels, clothing and other
issues is used to determine the height of the chair seat. Mass
produced chairs are typically 17 inches high.
For someone seated, the buttock popliteal length
is the horizontal distance from the back most part of the buttocks
to the back of the lower leg. This anthropometric measurement is
used to determine the seat depth. Mass produced chairs are
typically 38-43 cm deep.
Additional anthropometric measurements may be
relevant to designing a chair. Hip breadth is used for chair width
and armrest width. Elbow rest
height is used to determine the height of the armrests. The
buttock-knee length is used to determine "leg room" between rows of
chairs. "Seat pitch" is the distance between rows of seats. In some
airplanes and stadiums the leg room (the seat pitch less the
thickness of the seat at thigh level) is so small that it is
sometimes insufficient for the average person.
For adjustable chairs, such as an office
chair, the aforementioned principles are applied in adjusting
the chair to the individual occupant.
Armrests
A chair may or may not have armrests; chairs with armrests are termed armchairs. In French, a distinction is made between fauteuil and chaise, the terms for chairs with and without armrests, respectively. If present, armrests will support part of the body weight through the arms if the arms are resting on the armrests. Armrests further have the function of making entry and exit from the chair easier (but from the side it becomes more difficult). Armrests should support the forearm and not the sensitive elbow area. Hence in some chair designs, the armrest is not continuous to the chair back, but is missing in the elbow area.A couch,
bench,
or other arrangement of seats next to each other may have arm rest
at the sides and/or arm rests in between. The latter may be
provided for comfort, but also for privacy e.g. in public
transport and other public
places, and to prevent lying on the bench. Arm rests reduce
both desired and undesired proximity. A loveseat in
particular, has no arm rest in between.
Chair seats
Chair seats vary widely in construction and may or may not match construction of the chair's back (backrest).Some systems include:
- Solid center seats where a solid material forms the chair seat.
- Solid wood, may or may not be shaped to human contours.
- Wood slats, often seen on outdoor chairs
- Padded leather, generally a flat wood base covered in padding and contained in soft leather
- Stuffed fabric, similar to padded leather
- Metal seats of solid or open design
- Molded plastic
- Stone, often marble
- Open center seats where a soft material is attached to the tops
of chair legs or between stretchers to form the seat.
- Wicker, woven to provide a surface with give to it
- Leather, may be tooled with a design
- Fabric, simple covering without support
- Tape, wide fabric tape woven into seat, seen in lawn chairs and some old chairs
- Caning, woven from rush, reed, rawhide, heavy paper, strong grasses, cattails to form the seat, often in elaborate patterns
- Splint, ash, oak or hickory strips are woven
- Metal, Metal mesh or wire woven to form seat
Standards and specifications
Design considerations for chairs have been
codified into standards. ISO 9241,
"Ergonomic requirements for office work with visual display
terminals (VDTs) -- Part 5: Workstation layout and postural
requirements" is the most common one for modern chair design.
There are multiple specific standards for
different types of chairs. Dental chairs are specified by ISO 6875.
Bean bag chairs are specified by
ANSI standard ASTM F1912-98http://webstore.ansi.org/ansidocstore/product.asp?sku=ASTM+F1912%2D98.
ISO 7174 specifies stability of rocking and tilting chairs. ASTM
F1858-98 specifies lawn chairs. ASTM E1822-02b defines the
combustibility of chairs when they are stacked.
The Business and Institutional Furniture
Manufacturer's Association (BIFMA)http://www.bifma.org defines BIFMA X5.1
for testing of commercial-grade chairs. It specifies things
likehttp://www.lifetime.com/TablesAndChairs/bifma.pdf:
- chair back strength of 150 pounds (68 kg)
- chair stability if weight is transferred completely to the front or back legs
- leg strength of 75 pounds (34 kg) applied one inch (25 mm) from the bottom of the leg
- seat strength of 225 pounds (102 kg) dropped from six inches (150 mm) above the seat
- seat cycle strength of 100,000 repetitions of 125 pounds (57 kg) dropped from 2 inches (50 mm) above the seat
Large institutions that make bulk purchases will
reference these standards within their own even more detailed
criteria for purchase http://www.tbpc.state.tx.us/spec_lib/425/specs/06-12a.html.
Governments will often issue standards for purchases by government
agencies (e.g. Canada's
Canadian General Standards Board CAN/CGSB 44.15M http://www.techstreet.com/cgi-bin/detail?product_id=23061
on "Straight Stacking Chair, Steel" or CAN/CGSB 44.232-2002 on
"Task Chairs for Office Work with Visual Display Terminal" ).
Accessories
In place of a built-in footrest, some chairs come
with a matching ottoman. An ottoman is a short stool to be used as
a footrest but can sometimes be used as a stool. If matched to a
glider, the ottoman may be mounted on swing arms so that the
ottoman rocks back and forth with the main glider.
A chair cover is a temporary fabric cover for a
side chair. They are typically rented for formal events such as
wedding receptions to increase the attractiveness of the chairs and
decor. The chair covers may come with decorative chair ties, a
ribbon to be tied as a bow behind the chair. Covers for sofas and
couches are also available for homes with small children and pets.
In the second half of 20th
century, some people used custom clear plastic covers for
expensive sofas and chairs to protect them.
Chair pads are cushions for chairs. Some are
decorative. In cars, they may be used to increase the height of the
driver. Orthopedic backrests provide support for the back. Some
manufacturers have patents on their designs and are recognized by
medical associations as beneficialhttp://www.physiotherapy.ca/?WCE=C=47%7CK=223736http://www.cartalk.com/content/columns/Archive/1996/June/05.htmlhttp://www.chiroeco.com/article/1996/1996.php3?article=050696f2&menu=050696.
Car seats sometimes have built-in and adjustable lumbar
supports.
Chair mats are plastic mats meant to cover
carpet. This allows chairs on wheels to roll easily over the carpet
and it protects the carpet. They come in various shapes, some
specifically sized to fit partially under a desk.
Remote control bags can be draped over the arm of
easy chairs or sofas and used to hold remote controls. They are
counter-weighted so as to not slide off the arms under the weight
of the remote control.
English phrases relating to chairs
- A film or a story is said to keep you on the edge of your seat, if it is suspenseful or engaging.
- If you nearly fell off your chair, it was because you were very surprised.
- Activities that are likely to be made insignificant or undone by some future event are said to be like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.
- When English-speaking philosophers talk about the material world as opposed to ideas, their phrase is tables and chairs.
- An orchestra awards a musician a chair or seat based on ability. The best player will receive "first chair", or the "principal seat".
- Musical chairs is a common party game, and a colloquial expression to describe people shuffling from seat to seat, or around different locations.
- In American slang, to say someone has gotten "the chair" is to say that they have been executed by an electric chair.
See also
- Seating
- Throne
- Bean bag
- Car seat
- Electric chair for information on chairs used in judicial executions
- History of the chair
- List of chairs for an extended list of various chair types and makes
- Splat, the central vertical element of a wooden chair back
chair in Afrikaans: Stoel
chair in Arabic: كرسي
chair in Bengali: চেয়ার
chair in Belarusian: Стул
chair in Breton: Kador
chair in Bulgarian: Стол
chair in Catalan: Cadira
chair in Cebuano: Silya
chair in Czech: Židle
chair in Danish: Stol (møbel)
chair in German: Stuhl (Möbel)
chair in Dhivehi: ގޮނޑި
chair in Spanish: Silla
chair in Esperanto: Seĝo
chair in Basque: Aulki
chair in Persian: صندلی
chair in French: Chaise
chair in Galician: Cadeira (moble)
chair in Korean: 의자
chair in Hindi: कुर्सी
chair in Croatian: Stolica (namještaj)
chair in Igbo: Oche
chair in Indonesian: Kursi
chair in Icelandic: Stóll
chair in Italian: Sedia
chair in Hebrew: כיסא
chair in Lithuanian: Kėdė
chair in Lombard: Cadrega
chair in Hungarian: Szék
chair in Malay (macrolanguage): Kerusi
chair in Dutch: Stoel
chair in Dutch Low Saxon: Stool
chair in Japanese: 椅子
chair in Norwegian: Stol
chair in Norwegian Nynorsk: Stol
chair in Narom: Tchaîse
chair in Occitan (post 1500): Cadièra
chair in Polish: Krzesło
chair in Portuguese: Cadeira
chair in Romanian: Scaun
chair in Quechua: Tiyana
chair in Russian: Стул
chair in Sicilian: Sedda
chair in Simple English: Chair
chair in Slovak: Stolička
chair in Serbian: Столица
chair in Finnish: Tuoli
chair in Swedish: Stol
chair in Tamil: கதிரை
chair in Cherokee: ᎦᏍᎩᎶ
chair in Ukrainian: Стілець
chair in Venetian: Caréga
chair in Yiddish: שטול
chair in Contenese: 凳
chair in Samogitian: Krieslos
chair in Chinese: 椅
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Eames chair, Hitchcock chair, TV chair, administer, administrate, anoint, armchair, armless chair,
authority, ax, back seat, banquette, bar stool, barber
chair, barrel chair, basket chair, batwing chair, be master, bed
chair, beheading,
bench, bicycle seat,
block, boudoir chair,
bow-back chair, bucket seat, burning, camp chair, campaign
chair, capital punishment, captain, chair of English,
chairman, club chair,
club lounge chair, comb-back chair, command, contour chair, convener, cricket, cricket chair, cross, crown, crucifixion, curule chair,
dais, death chair, death
chamber, decapitation, decollation, defenestration, dining
chair, direct, directorship, discipline, draft chair,
drop, easy chair, elbowchair, electric chair,
electrocution,
enthrone, execution, fan-back chair,
fauteuil, fellowship, fender stool,
folding chair, foldstool, form, fusillade, gallows, gallows-tree, garden
chair, garrote, gas
chamber, gassing,
gibbet, govern, guillotine, halter, hanging, hassock, head, helm, hemlock, hemp, hempen collar, high chair,
horse, hot seat, inaugurate, induct, install, instate, invest, judicial murder,
ladder-back chair, lapidation, lead, leader, lethal chamber, maiden, manage, milking stool, moderate, moderator, necktie party,
noose, occupy the chair,
officer, officiate, ottoman, oversee, overstuffed chair,
pew, place, place in office, platform
rocker, poisoning,
position, preceptorship, preside, preside over, presiding
officer, professorate, professorhood, professoriate, professorship, put in,
readership, regulate, rocker, rocking chair, rope, run, saddle, scaffold, schoolmastery, seat, seat of power, seat of state,
sedan chair, settle,
shooting, speaker, stake, stand over, step stool,
stoning, stool, strangling, strangulation, supervise, swing, taboret, teachership, the ax, the
block, the chair, the gallows, the gas chamber, the guillotine, the
hot seat, the rope, throne, tree, tutelage, tutorage, tutorship, wield authority,
woolsack