Nearby Words

houses

[n., adj. hous; v. houz] Origin

house

[n., adj. hous; v. houz] noun, plural hous·es [hou-ziz] , verb, housed, hous·ing, adjective
noun
1.
a building in which people live; residence for human beings.
2.
a household.
3.
(often initial capital letter) a family, including ancestors and descendants: the great houses of France; the House of Hapsburg.
4.
a building for any purpose: a house of worship.
5.
a theater, concert hall, or auditorium: a vaudeville house.
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6.
the audience of a theater or the like.
7.
a place of shelter for an animal, bird, etc.
8.
the building in which a legislative or official deliberative body meets.
9.
(initial capital letter) the body itself, especially of a bicameral legislature: the House of Representatives.
10.
a quorum of such a body.
11.
(often initial capital letter) a commercial establishment; business firm: the House of Rothschild; a publishing house.
12.
a gambling casino.
13.
the management of a commercial establishment or of a gambling casino: rules of the house.
14.
an advisory or deliberative group, especially in church or college affairs.
15.
a college in an English-type university.
16.
a residential hall in a college or school; dormitory.
17.
the members or residents of any such residential hall.
18.
Informal. a brothel; whorehouse.
19.
British. a variety of lotto or bingo played with paper and pencil, especially by soldiers as a gambling game.
20.
Also called parish. Curling. the area enclosed by a circle 12 or 14 feet (3.7 or 4.2 meters) in diameter at each end of the rink, having the tee in the center.
21.
Nautical. any enclosed shelter above the weather deck of a vessel: bridge house; deck house.
22.
Astrology. one of the 12 divisions of the celestial sphere, numbered counterclockwise from the point of the eastern horizon.
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verb (used with object)
23.
to put or receive into a house, dwelling, or living quarters: More than 200 students were housed in the dormitory.
24.
to give shelter to; harbor; lodge: to house flood victims in schools.
25.
to provide with a place to work, study, or the like: This building houses our executive staff.
26.
to provide storage space for; be a receptacle for or repository of: The library houses 600,000 books.
27.
to remove from exposure; put in a safe place.
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28.
Nautical.
a.
to stow securely.
b.
to lower (an upper mast) and make secure, as alongside the lower mast.
c.
to heave (an anchor) home.
29.
Carpentry.
a.
to fit the end or edge of (a board or the like) into a notch, hole, or groove.
b.
to form (a joint) between two pieces of wood by fitting the end or edge of one into a dado of the other.
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Houses is always a great word to know.
So is quincunx. Does it mean:
an arrangement of five objects, as trees, in a square or rectangle, one at each corner and one in the middle.
a children's mummer's parade, as on the Fourth of July, with prizes for the best costumes.
verb (used without object)
30.
to take shelter; dwell.
adjective
31.
of, pertaining to, or noting a house.
32.
for or suitable for a house: house paint.
33.
of or being a product made by or for a specific retailer and often sold under the store's own label: You'll save money on the radio if you buy the house brand.
34.
served by a restaurant as its customary brand: the house wine.
35.
bring down the house, to call forth vigorous applause from an audience; be highly successful: The children's performances brought down the house.
36.
clean house. clean (def. 48).
37.
dress the house, Theater.
a.
to fill a theater with many people admitted on free passes; paper the house.
b.
to arrange or space the seating of patrons in such a way as to make an audience appear larger or a theater or nightclub more crowded than it actually is.
38.
keep house, to maintain a home; manage a household.
39.
like a house on fire/afire, very quickly; with energy or enthusiasm: The new product took off like a house on fire.
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40.
on the house, as a gift from the management; free: Tonight the drinks are on the house.
41.
put/set one's house in order,
a.
to settle one's affairs.
b.
to improve one's behavior or correct one's faults: It is easy to criticize others, but it would be better to put one's own house in order first.
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Origin:
before 900; (noun) Middle English h(o)us, Old English hūs; cognate with Dutch huis, Low German huus, Old Norse hūs, German Haus, Gothic -hūs (in gudhūs temple); (v.) Middle English housen, Old English hūsian, derivative of the noun

sub·house, noun
well-housed, adjective

home, house (see synonym note at the current entry).


1. domicile. House, dwelling, residence, home are terms applied to a place to live in. Dwelling is now chiefly poetic, or used in legal or technical contexts, as in a lease or in the phrase multiple dwelling. Residence is characteristic of formal usage and often implies size and elegance of structure and surroundings: the private residence of the king. These two terms and house have always had reference to the structure to be lived in. Home has recently taken on this meaning and become practically equivalent to house, the new meaning tending to crowd out the older connotations of family ties and domestic comfort. See also hotel.

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2012.
Cite This Source Link To houses
Etymonline
Word Origin & History

house
O.E. hus "dwelling, shelter, house," from P.Gmc. *khusan (cf. O.N., O.Fris. hus, Du. huis, Ger. Haus), of unknown origin, perhaps connected to the root of hide (v.). In Goth. only in gudhus "temple," lit. "god-house;" the usual word for "house" in Goth. being razn. Meaning
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"family, including ancestors and descendants, especially if noble" is from c.1000. The legislative sense (1540s) is transferred from the building in which the body meets. Meaning "audience in a theater" is from 1921; as a dance club DJ music style, probably from the Warehouse, a Chicago nightclub where the style is said to have originated. Zodiac sense is first attested late 14c. The verb meaning "give shelter to" is O.E. husian (cognate with Ger. hausen, Du. huizen). Household is first recorded late 14c.; for housewife (early 13c.) see hussy. To play house is from 1871; as suggestive of "have sex, shack up," 1968. House arrest first attested 1936; housewarming is from 1577; houseboat is 1790. On the house "free" is from 1889.
"And the Prophet Isaiah the sonne of Amos came to him, and saide vnto him, Thus saith the Lord, Set thine house in order: for thou shalt die, and not liue." [2 Kings xx.1, version of 1611]
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Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
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