Citations:floordrobe

Noun: "(humorous) clothing strewn on the floor"

 * 2002 — Gideon Haigh, The Vincibles: A Suburban Cricket Season, Victory Books (2009), ISBN 9780522856958, page 127:
 * Pity about the suit being covered in cat fur when I retrieved it from the floordrobe, but it was dark anyway.
 * 2002 — Michael Duffy, "Flayed by the fickle finger of fashion", The Advertiser, 1 June 2002:
 * As yellowing, tattered denim became chic, I felt like phoning every old girlfriend and female housemate who had ever complained about my dank piles of worn-out jeans (I call it my "floordrobe") to gloat that I was years ahead of my time, baby.
 * 2004 — Markie Robson Scott, "'I dread the day this house stops being a home'", The Independent, 21 September 2004:
 * Not only will the house fall strangely silent; their departure will also mean an end to the ceaseless washing and folding of jeans, T-shirts and boxers; there will be no more shopping for multi-packs of mango juice; no more peering gingerly into their rooms and grumbling about the "floordrobe" situation.
 * 2005 — Cathy Kelly, Always and Forever, Downtown Press (2005), ISBN 9781416548171, page 629:
 * "I'll come down and celebrate. A month's holiday. Yahoo! You phone Eileen and I'll locate my party dress! The floodrobe's getting worse and I can't find a thing!"
 * 2007 — Judy Rumbold, "We've got the look", The Telegraph, 15 April 2007:
 * She says most of my clothes are, and I quote, minging, but that doesn't stop her stealthily disappearing some of the just-about-acceptable items, rendering them wearable with the judicious addition of some New Look accessories, before casting them aside and leaving them to be trampled underfoot on what has become known as her 'floordrobe'.
 * 2008 — Catherine Mann, Rich Man's Fake Fiancee, Harlequin (2008), ISBN 9780373768783, page 55:
 * Starr pulled her sister up the stairs and into her bedroom... and holy cow, she' d meant it when she said she went through all her clothes. The different piles barely left any room to walk, turning the space into a veritable floordrobe.
 * 2010 — Nat Lauzon, "Is grime a crime?", Westmount Examiner, 15 January 2010:
 * Thursday I've given up on the bed making and Friday there is a full on "floordrobe" in every room of the house.
 * 2010 — Patrick Strudwick, "How I stopped being a slob", The Times, 15 June 2010:
 * Clothes lie like piled-up corpses across the floor of my bedroom. It's a floordrobe.