carpet
noun /ˈkɑːpɪt/
  /ˈkɑːrpɪt/
Idioms 
enlarge image[countable, uncountable] a piece of thick woven material made of wool, etc., used to cover the floor of a room or stairs; the material used for carpets- He spent the morning laying the new carpet.
 - a bedroom carpet
 - (British English) We have fitted carpets (= carpets from wall to wall) in our house.
 - a roll of carpet
 
Extra Examples- I'm having the carpets fitted today.
 - The cat curled up on the carpet.
 - The grey vinyl floor gave way to carpet tiles.
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- deep-pile
 - lush
 - plush
 - …
 
- roll
 
- make
 - weave
 - fit
 - …
 
- design
 - runner
 - tile
 - …
 
- on a/the carpet
 
- [countable] carpet (of something) (literary) a thick layer of something on the ground
- a carpet of snow
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- deep
 - thick
 - lush
 - …
 
- form
 
- carpet of
 
 
Word OriginMiddle English (denoting a thick fabric used as a cover for a table or bed): from Old French carpite or medieval Latin carpita, from obsolete Italian carpita ‘woollen counterpane’, based on Latin carpere ‘pluck, pull to pieces’.
Idioms 
(be/get called) on the carpet 
- (informal, especially North American English) called to see somebody in authority because you have done something wrong
- I got called on the carpet for being late.
 
 
sweep something under the carpet 
(US English also sweep something under the rug)
- to try to stop people from finding out about something wrong, illegal, embarrassing, etc. that has happened or that you have done
- An earlier report, implicating the government, had been conveniently swept under the carpet.
 
 
