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cocooning

[ kuh-koo-ning ]

noun

  1. the comforting self-care practice of staying in and spending time at home rather than going out to socialize, especially enjoying quiet or sedentary leisure activities or entertainment:

    After the excitement and activity of the holidays, I look forward to cocooning for the entire month of January.



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Word History and Origins

Origin of cocooning1

An Americanism dating back to 1985–90; cocoon ( def ) + -ing 1( def )
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Example Sentences

He also suggested government advisers were too quick to dismiss policies which, he argued, would have better protected the elderly and vulnerable by "cocooning" carers and other family members with whom they might have contact.

From BBC

When she’s out and about, this pacific, reserved woman turns her face into an impassive mask and wraps a long traditional blanket around her, effectively cocooning her body with it.

Combined with Mr. DeSantis’s cocooning himself in the right-wing media and the Trump team’s success in outflanking him on several fronts, the governor has lost control of his own national narrative.

In Hanford’s traditional cocooning, reactors are torn down to little more than their radioactive core, any openings are sealed up, and the roof is replaced.

The wontons have a delicate wrapper cocooning an amalgam of fatty pork and snappy shrimp, just begging to be stirred up in their bowl of sauce.

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