Advertisement

gown (n.)

long, loose outer garment, c. 1300, from Old French goune "robe, coat; (nun's) habit, gown," related to Late Latin gunna "leather garment, skin, hide," of unknown origin. Used by St. Boniface (8c.) for a fur garment permitted for old or infirm monks. Klein writes that it is probably "a word adopted from a language of the Apennine or the Balkan Peninsula." OED points to Byzantine Greek gouna, a word for a coarse garment sometimes made of skins, but also notes "some scholars regard it as of Celtic origin."

In 18c., gown was the common word for what now usually is styled a dress. It was maintained more in the U.S. than in Britain, but was somewhat revived 20c. in fashion senses and in combinations (such as bridal gown, nightgown). Meaning "flowing robe worn on official occasions as a badge of office or authority" is from late 14c. As collective singular for "residents of a university" (1650s) it typically is used in rhyming opposition to town.

Others are reading

Advertisement
Definitions of gown from WordNet
1
gown (n.)
a woman's dress, usually with a close-fitting bodice and a long flared skirt, often worn on formal occasions;
gown (n.)
the members of a university as distinguished from the other residents of the town in which the university is located;
the relations between town and gown are always sensitive
gown (n.)
lingerie consisting of a loose dress designed to be worn in bed by women;
Synonyms: nightgown / nightie / night-robe / nightdress
gown (n.)
protective garment worn by surgeons during operations;
Synonyms: surgical gown / scrubs
gown (n.)
outerwear consisting of a long flowing garment used for official or ceremonial occasions;
Synonyms: robe
2
gown (v.)
dress in a gown;
From wordnet.princeton.edu