n
Alternative spelling of alehouse [A business, such as an inn or tavern, where ale is sold.]
n
(Australia, New Zealand) A building at a park, campground, caravan park, or holiday park containing multiple facilities for use by patrons such as toilets, showers, kitchen, laundry, or lockers.
n
(US) A frame house with clapboard siding.
n
Alternative form of art house [A cinema that shows art films and foreign films which are not widely distributed.]
n
Alternative spelling of art house [A cinema that shows art films and foreign films which are not widely distributed.]
n
Alternative form of backhouse. [(now dialect) An outbuilding behind the main building.]
n
(US, Canada, euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(colloquial) A barn occupant.
n
Alternative form of basket house [(idiomatic) A cafe or similar establishment where musical performances are given and the performers are then paid with money placed in a basket by members of the audience.]
n
Alternative form of basket house [(idiomatic) A cafe or similar establishment where musical performances are given and the performers are then paid with money placed in a basket by members of the audience.]
n
A place to sleep and eat; bed and breakfast; the services provided by an inn or similar establishment.
n
A private home, guesthouse, etc. where guests are provided overnight accommodations and served breakfast but usually no other meals.
n
Alternative form of beadhouse [(historical) An almshouse for poor people who pray daily for their benefactors.]
n
Alternative form of big house (“religious building of the Delaware Indians”) [(slang) Prison, jail.]
n
Alternative spelling of black-house [A traditional house, in some parts of Scotland, having drystone walls and a turf roof.]
n
Alternative form of boat shed [Synonym of boathouse]
n
Alternative form of boghouse: an outhouse. [(UK, vulgar slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(UK, vulgar slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative form of boomhouse [(logging) A building for housing the operator of the winch that controls a boom which is used to control the flow of logs that float downriver to the sawmill.]
n
Alternative form of boomhouse [(logging) A building for housing the operator of the winch that controls a boom which is used to control the flow of logs that float downriver to the sawmill.]
n
(sometimes derogatory) A house resembling a bungalow.
n
A building providing sleeping quarters for workers or guests, especially in a rural setting.
n
Alternative form of bunkie (“bunkmate”) [Familiar term of address.]
n
A field or plain in a Spanish- or Portuguese-speaking area.
n
Alternative form of cardhouse [(countable) Synonym of house of cards (any sense).]
n
A man who is dedicated to his career.
n
Alternative form of khazi: an outhouse; a lavatory. [(slang, chiefly UK) An outhouse or lavatory: a place used for urination and defecation.]
n
Alternative form of khazi: a lavatory; a toilet. [(slang, chiefly UK) An outhouse or lavatory: a place used for urination and defecation.]
n
Alternative spelling of shanty (“song”) [A roughly-built hut or cabin.]
n
Alternative form of charnel house [a vault or other building in which the bones of the dead are stored]
n
(obsolete, euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(euphemistic, obsolete) An outhouse.
n
(vulgar slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative spelling of cubby house [A child's play house.]
n
(India, historical) A posthouse of the old Indian postal service (dak), used as lodging by itinerant British officials and other travellers and as a make-shift courthouse in rural areas.
n
Alternative form of dak bungalow [(India, historical) A posthouse of the old Indian postal service (dak), used as lodging by itinerant British officials and other travellers and as a make-shift courthouse in rural areas.]
n
Alternative spelling of doghouse [Any small house or structure or enclosure used to house a dog.]
n
Mechanically, an equipment cover with an opening, with a shape resembling a doghouse.
n
(Australia) A transportable building with single rooms, often used on remote work sites or as tourist accommodation.
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative form of draught-house: an outhouse. [(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative form of draught-house: an outhouse. [(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(uncommon) Alternative form of dunnekin: an outhouse. [(archaic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(uncommon) Alternative form of dunnekin: an outhouse. [(archaic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(uncommon) Alternative form of dunnekin (“outhouse”) [(archaic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(archaic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative form of dunnekin: an outhouse. [(archaic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(uncommon) Alternative form of dunnekin: an outhouse. [(archaic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
Alternative form of dyehouse [A building where dyeing takes place.]
n
An outhouse or lavatory which uses a cesspit rather than a flush toilet and plumbing.
n
Alternative spelling of eco-house [A house designed to be environmentally friendly.]
adj
(of a bathroom etc) Connected to a bedroom.
n
Alternative form of field house [(rare) A tent.]
n
(travel) A hotel rate that includes accommodation, breakfast, lunch and dinner.
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative spelling of jailhouse [A building containing a prison.]
n
(US, Southern US) A privy.
n
Alternative form of gighouse [A building for keeping a gig (horse-drawn carriage) when not in use; carriage house.]
n
Alternative form of gighouse [A building for keeping a gig (horse-drawn carriage) when not in use; carriage house.]
n
A building for keeping a gig (horse-drawn carriage) when not in use; carriage house.
n
(obsolete, euphemistic slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(obsolete) Alternative form of gingerbread office: an outhouse. [(obsolete, euphemistic slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
A building serving as a shelter for goats.
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(obsolete) Alternative form of gonghouse: an outhouse. [(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
A separate building or tent in a camp or other complex set aside for preparing and/or eating food.
n
Alternative form of guesthouse [A small house near a main house, for lodging visitors.]
n
Alternative spelling of headhouse [The portion of a passenger railway terminal not housing the tracks and platforms, comprising ticket counters, baggage facilities, etc.]
n
Alternative form of henhouse [A small house or hutch for chickens or, more specifically, hens to live in.]
n
Alternative form of henhouse [A small house or hutch for chickens or, more specifically, hens to live in.]
n
Alternative form of hizzy [(slang) A house, a residence.]
n
Alternative form of hizouse [(slang) House.]
n
Alternative form of hoosegow [(US, slang) A jail.]
n
Alternative form of hoosegow [(US, slang) A jail.]
adj
Alternative spelling of hothouse
n
Alternative form of housebarn [A building that is a combination of a house and a barn.]
n
(Canada slang, humorous euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(euphemistic, obsolete) An outbuilding used to ease one's bowels: an outhouse.
n
(euphemistic, obsolete) An outbuilding in which to do one's easement (defecate): an outhouse.
n
(obsolete, euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
v
Alternative form of housetrain. [(transitive) To teach (a domestic pet) to urinate and defecate outside or in a designated location in the home.]
n
Alternative form of housebarn [A building that is a combination of a house and a barn.]
n
Alternative form of housebote [(law, obsolete) Wood allowed to a tenant for repairing the house and for fuel.]
adj
Alternative spelling of housebroken [Of animals: trained to avoid urinating or defecating in the house, except within a litterbox, toilet, or other receptacle.]
v
Alternative form of housetrain. [(transitive) To teach (a domestic pet) to urinate and defecate outside or in a designated location in the home.]
n
(Australia, slang) A resident of public housing.
n
Alternative spelling of icehouse [A deep cellar or outdoor building used for the storage of ice or snow; sometimes also used to store food at low temperature.]
n
(obsolete) Alternative form of jakes: a place to urinate or defecate, an outhouse or lavatory. [.]](now chiefly Ireland) A place to urinate and defecate: an outhouse or lavatory.]
n
Alternative form of jakeshouse: an outhouse. [(obsolete) An outbuilding with a jakes: an outhouse.]
n
Alternative form of jakeshouse: an outhouse. [(obsolete) An outbuilding with a jakes: an outhouse.]
n
(obsolete) An outbuilding with a jakes: an outhouse.
n
(chiefly US) An outhouse or portable toilet.
n
Alternative form of khazi (“toilet”) [(slang, chiefly UK) An outhouse or lavatory: a place used for urination and defecation.]
n
Alternative form of khazi (“toilet”) [(slang, chiefly UK) An outhouse or lavatory: a place used for urination and defecation.]
n
Alternative form of kill house [A live shooting range used to train military and police personnel, usually built to mimic spaces in authentic everyday buildings]
n
Alternative spelling of kipsy [(Australia) A house or shelter.]
n
(Australia) A house or shelter.
n
Alternative form of laithe house [A dwelling with other farm buildings, including a barn, as a single structural unit, with separate entrances for human and livestock areas.]
n
Alternative form of lit-house [(dialectal) A dyehouse.]
n
(UK dialect, Australia, New Zealand) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Alternative form of longhouse. [A long communal housing of the Iroquois and some other American Indians, the Malaysians, the Indonesians, the Vikings, and many other peoples.]
n
Alternative form of longhouse. [A long communal housing of the Iroquois and some other American Indians, the Malaysians, the Indonesians, the Vikings, and many other peoples.]
n
(obsolete, euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used for urination and defecation.
n
Alternative form of milkhouse [A building (or portion thereof) on a dairy farm where milk is collected, cooled, and stored temporarily, pending sale and shipment.]
n
Alternative form of milkhouse [A building (or portion thereof) on a dairy farm where milk is collected, cooled, and stored temporarily, pending sale and shipment.]
n
Alternative spelling of neathouse [(obsolete) A building for the shelter of neat cattle.]
n
(obsolete) A building for the shelter of neat cattle.
n
(euphemistic, obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used for the "necessary" business of urination and defecation.
n
(euphemistic, obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used for the "necessary" business of urination and defecation.
n
Alternative spelling of negro-house [(US, dated, now offensive) A house where black slaves are kept.]
n
(Tyneside) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(Britain) a building containing oasts, used in conjunction with hop harvesting.
n
Alternative spelling of oast house [(Britain) a building containing oasts, used in conjunction with hop harvesting.]
n
(now in the plural, dated) The parts of a house or estate devoted to manual work and storage, as the kitchen, scullery, laundry, stables, etc., particularly (euphemistic, dated) a house or estate's facilities for urination and defecation: outhouses or lavatories.
n
(obsolete) A building or outhouse on a farm, estate, manor, palace, etc. used for household work, storage, housing servants, etc; the office of the steward or bailiff on a manor or estate; a house of office.
n
(US slang) An outhouse with a single hole.
n
(Canada, US) An outbuilding, typically permanent, containing a toilet or seat over a cesspit.
n
An outbuilding in the form of a hut.
n
(obsolete, rare) An outbuilding used for the passage of feces: an outhouse.
n
Alternative form of passage house: an outhouse. [(obsolete, rare) An outbuilding used for the passage of feces: an outhouse.]
n
(obsolete, Scotland) A fortified house
n
(dialectal, euphemistic, informal) An outbuilding used as a lavatory; an outhouse, a privy.
n
(regional euphemistic) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
Initialism of penthouse. [(dated or historical) An outhouse or other structure (especially one with a sloping roof) attached to the outside wall of a building, sometimes as protection from the weather.]
n
Alternative form of picket-house [A wooden building made by fitting boards across a framework of upright poles, often constructed as part of an outpost or as the first shelter in a new homestead.]
n
Alternative form of picket-house [A wooden building made by fitting boards across a framework of upright poles, often constructed as part of an outpost or as the first shelter in a new homestead.]
n
Alternative form of poolhouse [A structure containing equipment used for a swimming pool.]
n
(US) A room with pool tables where pool can be played, usually for a fee.
n
Alternative form of poorhouse [A charitable institution where poor or homeless people are lodged.]
n
Alternative form of posthouse [A house established for the convenience of the post, a stable or inn where relays of horses can be obtained.]
n
Alternative form of posthouse [A house established for the convenience of the post, a stable or inn where relays of horses can be obtained.]
n
Alternative form of posthouse [A house established for the convenience of the post, a stable or inn where relays of horses can be obtained.]
n
Alternative spelling of pot-house [A pub; a tavern.]
n
An outhouse: an outbuilding used for urination and defecation.
n
Alternative form of privy house: an outhouse. [An outhouse: an outbuilding used for urination and defecation.]
n
Alternative spelling of public house [(UK, formal) A pub; a British bar or tavern, often selling food and sometimes lodging; an inn.]
n
alternative form of pumphouse [A building containing pumping equipment; thus:]
n
Alternative form of roundhouse [A circular prison, especially a small local lockup or station house.]
n
(India, archaic) The provisions of grain, forage, and other necessaries prepared by the local officers at the campground of a military force or official cortege.
n
Alternative form of shouse [(Australia slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
Obsolete spelling of schoolhouse [A building housing a school, especially a small or single-room one.]
n
A rudimentary or improvised dwelling, especially one not legally owned.
n
(figuratively, Scotland, euphemistic, obsolete) A place with a toilet seat: an outhouse; a lavatory.
n
Alternative spelling of shithouse [(vulgar, informal) An outhouse, an outbuilding used as a lavatory.]
n
(vulgar, informal) An outhouse, an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
A narrow shack with a door at each end, common in the Southern United States from the end of the Civil War until the 1920s.
n
(Australia slang) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
n
(obsolete) A place with a toilet seat: an outhouse; a lavatory.
n
Alternative form of siegehouse: an outhouse. [(euphemistic, obsolete) An outbuilding with toilet seats: an outhouse.]
n
Alternative form of siegehouse: an outhouse. [(euphemistic, obsolete) An outbuilding with toilet seats: an outhouse.]
n
(euphemistic, obsolete) An outbuilding with toilet seats: an outhouse.
n
Alternative form of sitootery [(Scotland) A small patio or sheltered area outside a house suitable for sitting in for relaxation or socialising.]
n
Alternative form of soddie [(US, Canada, informal) A house constructed from blocks of sod, once common in the prairies of the United States and Canada.]
n
(military) A kind of covered shed, formerly used by besiegers in filling up and passing the ditch of a besieged place, sapping and mining the wall, etc.
n
Alternative form of springhouse [A small building constructed over a spring, formerly used for refrigeration (and thus sometimes also serving as pumphouse, milkhouse, or root cellar).]
n
Alternative form of sponging-house [(historical) A place of temporary confinement for debtors, kept by a bailiff, where debtors were sponged of all money they had on themselves, before being transferred to debtor's prison.]
n
Alternative form of station house [A building at a post or station.]
n
Alternative spelling of sugarhouse [(historical) A factory for the refining of raw sugar from Barbados.]
n
Alternative spelling of sugarhouse [(historical) A factory for the refining of raw sugar from Barbados.]
n
Alternative spelling of summerhouse [A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year.]
n
A small building, usually located next to a larger house, used as a kitchen in warm weather.
n
Alternative spelling of summerhouse [A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year.]
n
Alternative form of tacklehouse. [A building located at a port, and the corresponding business operated by one of the major shipping companies, that employs porters to load and unload goods from ships.]
n
Alternative form of tacklehouse [A building located at a port, and the corresponding business operated by one of the major shipping companies, that employs porters to load and unload goods from ships.]
n
(UK obsolete, dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A newsmonger's house; a place or person resorted to by idlers; a hangout.
n
Alternative form of trap house [(slang) A place where illegal drugs are manufactured, packaged for sale, or sold on the street.]
n
(uncommon) Alternative form of usual offices: an outhouse or lavatory. [(euphemistic, archaic) A place in which to urinate and defecate: an outhouse; a lavatory.]
n
(Canada) Any of a large number of modest, wooden frame houses, typically of Cape-Cod design, built in municipalities across Canada during the 1940s under the federal government's Wartime Housing Limited program.
n
Alternative form of washhouse [A domestic outbuilding used as a laundry.]
n
Alternative spelling of watchhouse [A small prison attached to a police station, usually used on a temporary basis.]
n
A small building that houses a well.
n
Alternative form of wheelhouse [The partially enclosed structure above and around a wheel of an automobile, typically partly formed by a portion of a fender panel that has been extended outward beyond the plane of the rest of the panel.]
n
Alternative form of wheelhouse [The partially enclosed structure above and around a wheel of an automobile, typically partly formed by a portion of a fender panel that has been extended outward beyond the plane of the rest of the panel.]
n
(obsolete) An outhouse: an outbuilding used as a lavatory.
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!
Today's secret word is 8 letters and means "Characterized by wickedness or cruelty." Can you find it?