n
(Caribbean) A simple bamboo hut.
n
(New Zealand, northern) A holiday home, usually small and near the beach, often with only one or two rooms and of simple construction.
n
The yard associated with or surrounding a barn.
n
(chiefly Britain) A hill.
n
A small house on the beach, a shelter from the sun or wind, a place for changing into and out of swimming costumes and for the safe storing of some personal belongings.
n
(Australia) A beach hut.
n
(UK, Australia) A small, single-room building above high-water mark on a beach that is used for changing into swimming clothes, for recreation, or for temporary storage.
n
(finance) The use of bed-and-breakfast deals.
n
(zoology) The spot where an animal sleeps.
n
(US, agriculture) A location where grain is stored in bins.
n
A traditional house, in some parts of Scotland, having drystone walls and a turf roof.
n
(in parts of French North Africa) Hinterland, field.
n
hut (a small timber dwelling with thatched roof)
n
A small stall for the display and sale of goods.
n
Alternative form of borstal (“way up a hill”) [(UK) A way up a hill in the South Downs.]
n
Alternative form of bothy [(Scotland, Ireland, Northumbria) A small cottage, especially one for communal use in remote areas by labourers or farmhands.]
adj
(euphemistic, simile, idiomatic) Synonym of built like a brick shithouse
n
A half-dugout shelter, a combination of a sod house and a log cabin, found in Eastern Europe
n
A cabin or hut for relaxing.
n
A shed for keeping carts.
n
A small chapel or shrine.
n
(figuratively) A flimsy arrangement or structure.
n
(historical) A large, sometimes architecturally impressive building for housing a large colony of pigeons or doves, particularly those of ancien regime France.
n
Alternative form of corn crib [A slatted bin for drying corn (maize).]
n
A loft for corn; a granary.
n
A market where corn is traded.
n
A hovel, a roughly constructed building best suited to the shelter of animals but used for human habitation.
n
A small room carved out of the wall of a catacomb, used as mortuary chapels, and in Roman times, for Christian worship.
n
(Wales) A cubbyhole or similar hiding place.
n
Alternative form of driveshed [A rural structure built for sheltering vehicles, farm machinery, and/or visitors' horses.]
n
(UK) A type of barn for storing hay
n
Alternative form of ewery [(historical, UK) An office or place of household service where the ewers and table linen were kept.]
n
Alternative form of eyot (an island) [(chiefly Britain) A little island, especially in a river or lake.]
n
(law, Norfolk, Suffolk, obsolete) A privilege of setting up, and moving about, folds for sheep, in any fields within manors, in order to manure them; often reserved to himself by the lord of the manor.
n
A former unit of area, the amount of land that would be sown with a fanega of seed.
n
A toolshed in a garden or allotment, holding gardening equipment.
n
A clearing in the woods; as such, part of many placenames in northern England
n
(agriculture) A storage facility for grain or sometimes animal feed.
n
The upper storey of a barn used for storing hay.
n
A small house or hutch for chickens or, more specifically, hens to live in.
n
(chiefly Britain or India) A billboard.
n
A bricklayer's or mason's laborer who carries bricks, mortar, cement and the like in a hod.
n
Alternative form of hop field [A field in which hops are grown]
n
A poor cottage; a small, mean house; a hut.
n
(Australia) A hut or temporary shelter made from bark and tree branches, traditionally used by Aboriginal people.
n
A small, simple one-storey dwelling or shelter, often with just one room, and generally built of readily available local materials.
adj
Containing or composed of huts.
n
someone who lives in a hut
n
A wattle-and-mud hut common in Mexico and the southwestern US.
n
Alternative form of kailyard [(Scotland) A kitchen garden.]
n
(now rare, dialectal) Shelter.
n
Alternative form of linhay [(dialectal, south-west Britain) A shed or other outbuilding.]
n
Alternative form of linhay [(dialectal, south-west Britain) A shed or other outbuilding.]
n
A small simple dwelling made from logs.
n
A room in a private house, a joint sitting-room/dining-room.
n
An inhabitant of a marshy area or piece of marshland.
n
Alternative spelling of matshed [In late modern China and Hong Kong, a temporary structure made of bamboo poles and palm leaves.]
n
Alternative spelling of matshed [In late modern China and Hong Kong, a temporary structure made of bamboo poles and palm leaves.]
n
In late modern China and Hong Kong, a temporary structure made of bamboo poles and palm leaves.
n
A simple house built primarily of mud.
n
A rudimentary building used by people making field observations.
n
A building, such as a barn, shed, or garage, that is separate from, but associated with some main building
n
(Australia, New Zealand) A field of grassland of any size, either enclosed by fences or delimited by geographical boundaries, especially a large area for keeping cattle or sheep.
n
A kind of banked barn built in the USA from about 1820-1900, having an overshoot or forebay: an area where one or more walls overshoot the foundation.
n
Any structure shaped like a church pew, such as a stall, formerly used by money lenders, etc.; a box in a theatre; or a pen or sheepfold.
n
(Scotland) A kind of crude underground dwelling or earthhouse.
n
Alternative spelling of pigeonhole [One of an array of compartments for housing pigeons.]
n
A small crude shelter; a hovel; a cottage; a hut.
n
An enclosure for children to play in.
n
A man who plows land with a plough.
n
A structure containing equipment used for a swimming pool.
n
(idiomatic) A public place where strangers, paupers, and criminals are buried.
n
Alternative spelling of quinzhee [(Canada) A shelter made by hollowing out a pile of snow.]
n
(US, regional) A simple hut, as of posts, covered with branches or thatch, where herdsmen or farm workers may lodge at night.
n
A long, narrow strip of land for farming, often alongside a waterway or a road.
n
A crude, roughly built hut or cabin.
n
A roughly-built hut or cabin.
n
A large temporary open structure for reception of goods.
n
The set of knowledge and skills needed to construct and maintain shelter in the wilderness.
n
A building for exhibiting cattle and other domestic animals, as at a county fairgrounds.
n
A small addition to a cottage.
n
(housing, construction) A kind of dwelling or shed made from slabs of split or sawn timber.
n
A small building constructed over a spring, formerly used for refrigeration (and thus sometimes also serving as pumphouse, milkhouse, or root cellar).
n
A building, wing or dependency set apart and adapted for lodging and feeding (and training) ungulates, especially horses.
n
A bench or table on which small articles of merchandise are exposed for sale.
n
One who supplies raw material to a machine
n
Alternative form of teepee [A cone-shaped tent traditionally used by many native peoples of the Great Plains of North America.]
n
An earth-sheltered cold frame.
n
A house or shed for storing (chopped) wood
n
An enclosed, roofed structure, often an outbuilding, used primarily to store firewood.
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