A tuffet, pouffe, or hassock is a piece of furniture used as a footstool or low seat. It is distinguished from a stool in that it is completely covered in cloth so that no legs are visible, and is essentially a large hard cushion that may have an internal wooden frame to give it more rigidity.

Wooden feet may be added to the base to give it stability, at which point it becomes a stool or a footstool. If the piece is larger, with storage space inside it, then it is generally known as an ottoman.

The term hassock has a special association with churches, where it is used to describe the thick cushions (also called kneelers) employed by the congregation to kneel on while in prayer.

The names tuffet and hassock are both derived from English names for "a small grassyhillock or clump of grass", in use since at least the sixteenth century. The word tuffetcomes from Anglo-French tuffete, from *tufe "tuft". The first known use of the word tuffetwas in 1553.

More Info: en.m.wikipedia.org