What is the difference between a davenport and a couch

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While some use the words "sofa," "couch" or "davenport" interchangeably, a davenport originally meant a sofa designed by the A.H. Davenport Company. As with other brand names throughout the ages, the term "davenport"

worked its way into common language during a specific time period generations back, used in place of the term "sofa" or "couch."

Davenport Defined

By the end of the 1800s, sofa manufacture was big business. Several sofa brands became so popular that the company names became household terms, such as Chesterfield or Davenport. The A.H. Davenport Company's large upholstered couch became a signature style for the manufacturer during this time, even though it also manufactured other types of furniture. In the early 1900s, Davenport filed a patent for a sofa bed. When sofa owners started calling their large seats "davenports," the term caught on, even if A.H. Davenport did not manufacture them. The name stuck for several generations but is a fairly uncommon term for 21st-century furniture.

Vince in Norristown, Pennsylvania, is pondering whether the terms couch, sofa, and davenport are all regional terms for the same piece of heavy furniture. The short answer is that throughout the United States, the term couch is the most common, followed by sofa. The term chesterfield is more often heard in Canada, when it is heard at all. For an in-depth look at the wide variety of words we use for the rooms in a house and the objects in them check out Language and Material Culture by Allison Burkette. This is part of a complete episode.

What you call a long, upholstered piece of living room furniture depends on where you live and when you were born.

‘Davenport’

For example, “couch” and “sofa” are currently the most popular names, but my parents called it a davenport because that name was once common in the upper Midwest, which is where my parents grew up. The name came from the A.H. Davenport Company, a manufacturer of this type of furniture in the mid-1800s and into the early 1900s, including opens in a new windowpieces that furnished the White House. From a Google Ngram search in books, it looks as if “davenport” peaked in the United States in the mid-1940s after which its use dropped dramatically and then has been stable at a lower rate since around 1970.

Usage of ‘Couch’ and ‘Sofa’

In 2009, I posted a nonscientific online poll asking what you call a long, upholstered piece of furniture, and nearly 4,500 people replied. “Couch” was the clear winner with 71% of the responses, “sofa” was next with 27% of the responses, and all the others had fractions of a percent:

  • Couch 71.1%
  • Sofa 26.6%
  • Chesterfield 0.8%
  • Settee 0.8%
  • Davenport 0.6%
  • Divan 0.3%

Some people told me that “lounge” (which I neglected to include in the poll) is a dominant term in Australia.


Anecdotally, I’ve seen the assertion that “sofa” is proper, and “couch” is slang, but I couldn’t find any data or reference books to back that up. It may simply come from the fact that “sofa” is more popular in Britain, and “couch” is more popular in the United States, and some British people consider American terms to be less proper. Also, “couch” probably won so dramatically in my online poll because the respondents skewed American.

There may also be differences by class, at least in Britain, that didn’t show up in my poll. For example, I found opens in a new windowa linguistics corpus study that says middle class people in Britain were more likely to use “sofa” or “couch,” whereas working class people were more likely to use “settee.”

Origin of ‘Couch’ and ‘Sofa’

Dictionaries say that “couch” is actually the older term and has been around since Middle English (as “couche”) and comes from an Old French (“culche”) word meaning “to put into place,” “to lie down,” or “to put into bed.”

“Sofa” made its appearance in English at least a couple hundred years later, coming from the Arabic word “soffah” or “ opens in a new windowsuffah” which originally meant “a bench.” “Sofa” came to describe the piece of furniture we think of today in the early 1700s.

In the old days, opens in a new windowa couch may or may not have had a back or may have had a half-back , and may have had only an armrest on one end or had a raised end such as a psychiatrist’s couch, but my impression is that today, “sofa” and “couch” are both regularly used to describe furniture that has both a back and arms.

Examples of ‘Chesterfield’

Some responses to the poll led me to believe that “chesterfield” is more popular in Canada than in the U.S. and may also have some traction in California, and some online searching further convinced me that “chesterfield” is more popular in Canada than in the U.S. For example, here’s a line from a book called “ opens in a new windowMelanie Bluelake’s Dream,” written in 1995 by a Saskatchewan teacher named Betty Fitzpatrick Dorion:

  • While Rachel jacked up the thermostat, Melanie curled up in a shivering ball on the chesterfield.

And here’s another example from nonfiction book called “ opens in a new windowGrowing Up: Childhood in English Canada from the Great War to the Age of Television” by Neil Sutherland. In this example a woman is taking about her grandmother and says

  • I always came and sat right beside her on the chesterfield to watch TV.

opens in a new windowDictionary.com also notes that “chesterfield” is “chiefly Canadian.” Unfortunately, Google Ngram searches only let me filter by British English and American English, so I can’t track Canadian trends over time, but I did find opens in a new windowa linguistics study that says “chesterfield” in Canada is much like “davenport” in the United States: it was a common term years ago and is still sometimes used by older people, but among younger Canadians, “couch” is the common term.

Multiple opens in a new windowsources say the furniture gets its “chesterfield” name from the nineteenth century Earl of Chesterfield, Lord Phillip Stanhope, who may have commissioned a long seat with “ opens in a new windowdeep buttoned upholstery, rolled arms, and equal back and arm height” so his noble visitors would have a comfortable place to sit.

Summary

To sum up, “couch” and “sofa” are currently by far the most popular terms in the U.S. and the U.K. British writers appear to favor “sofa,” and American writers appear to favor “couch”; and you may occasionally hear “divan,” “settee,” “chesterfield,” and “davenport,” especially among older people.

Finally, for a bit of fun, I laughed at this argument one respondent made to prove that the correct term is “couch.” He asked, “Who ever heard of a sofa potato?”

Image courtesy of opens in a new windowShutterstock.

Mignon Fogarty is Grammar Girl and the founder of Quick and Dirty Tips. Check out her New York Times best-seller “ opens in a new windowGrammar Girl’s Quick and Dirty Tips for Better Writing” and her opens in a new window2018 tip-a-day calendar.

Why do they call a sofa a davenport?

Davenport was the name of a series of sofas made by the Massachusetts furniture manufacturer A. H. Davenport and Company, now defunct. Due to the popularity of the furniture at the time, the name davenport became a genericized trademark in parts of the United States.

Who calls a couch a davenport?

Today, the term Davenport is rarely used, though it still survives as a part of regional slang in New England and the Midwest. Even then, it's predominantly used by older people who remember the Davenport sofas of the early-to-mid 20th century.

Is there a difference between a sofa and a couch?

The term "couch," believed to be derived from the French word "couche," is used to describe "a piece of furniture with no arms used for lying." On the other hand, Merriam-Webster defines a "sofa" as "a long, upholstered seat usually with arms and a back, and often convertible into a bed."

What piece of furniture is a davenport?

davenport, in modern usage, a large upholstered settee, but in the 18th century a compact desk having deep drawers on the right side and dummy drawer fronts on the left side.