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Bolster

A bolster is a long narrow pillow or cushion filled with cotton, down or fibre. Bolsters are usually firm for back or arm support or for decorative application. They are not a standard size or shape and commonly have a zipper or hook-and-loop enclosure. A foam insert is sometimes used for additional support. A bolster is also referred to as a cushion, a pillow and a prop. A bolster is a long narrow pillow or cushion filled with cotton, down or fibre. Bolsters are usually firm for back or arm support or for decorative application. They are not a standard size or shape and commonly have a zipper or hook-and-loop enclosure. A foam insert is sometimes used for additional support. A bolster is also referred to as a cushion, a pillow and a prop. The word is from both Middle and Old English, and is a cognate of the Old English belg, 'bag'. The first known use of the word 'bolster' was before the 12th century. In Southeast Asian countries, in particular Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Malaysia and Thailand, the bolster is designed to be hugged when sleeping. In Vietnam, it is known as gối ôm ('hugging pillow') or 'pillowy', while in the Philippines, the traditional tandayan is also colloquially known a 'hotdog pillow'. Cambodians call it a 'ខ្នើយអោប', which directly translates to 'hug pillow'. Malays call it bantal peluk, and Indonesians call it bantal guling. In Thailand, it is known as หมอนข้าง (monkhang); หมอน (mon) means 'pillow' and ข้าง (khang) means 'beside'. In India and Pakistan, a type of bolster is known there as a lode (in Marathi), gao-takkiya, masnad masland, or paash-baalish/kol-baalish (in Bengali, and is used for back support aside from hugging during sleep. In China, it is called bàozhěn in Mandarin (simplified: 抱枕, 'hugging pillow'), while in Cantonese it is known as laam2 zam2 (traditional: 攬枕; pinyin: lǎn zhěn). Bolsters are called dakimakura (抱き枕) in Japan. Tradition suggests that a wife would fashion the bolster out of bamboo and give it to her husband when he travelled away from home so that he would not be lonely at night, hence the alternative terms 'bamboo wife,' 'Dutch wife,' or chikufujin (竹夫人). In Korea, it is referred to as a jukbuin (죽부인), from the words juk ('bamboo') and puin ('wife'). A jukbuin is used in the summer months to cool down while sleeping, since its hollow construction from thin bamboo strips allows air to flow through the pillow. A person tightly wraps their arms and legs around the jukbuin while sleeping.

[ "Linguistics", "Archaeology", "Utility model", "Structural engineering", "Mechanical engineering", "Direction compound", "Span bolster", "Scaffolding tissue" ]
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