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Houses

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
House, Edward Mandell Known as "Colonel House." 1858-1938.
American diplomat and adviser to President Woodrow Wilson. He organized U.S. preparations for the Paris Peace Conference of 1919.

House, Son Originally Eddie James House. 1902-1988.
American singer and guitarist. During the 1940s he made many blues recordings for the Library of Congress.

house  (hous)
n. pl. hous·es (houzz, -sz)
1.
a. A structure serving as a dwelling for one or more persons, especially for a family.
b. A household or family.
2. Something, such as a burrow or shell, that serves as a shelter or habitation for a wild animal.
3. A dwelling for a group of people, such as students or members of a religious community, who live together as a unit: a sorority house.
4. A building that functions as the primary shelter or location of something: a carriage house; the lion house at the zoo.
5.
a. A facility, such as a theater or restaurant, that provides entertainment or food for the public: a movie house; the specialty of the house.
b. The audience or patrons of such an establishment: a full house.
6.
a. A commercial firm: a brokerage house.
b. A publishing company: a house that specializes in cookbooks.
c. A gambling casino.
d. Slang A house of prostitution.
7. A residential college within a university.
8.
a. often House A legislative or deliberative assembly.
b. The hall or chamber in which such an assembly meets.
c. A quorum of such an assembly.
9. often House A family line including ancestors and descendants, especially a royal or noble family: the House of Orange.
10.
a. One of the 12 parts into which the heavens are divided in astrology.
b. The sign of the zodiac indicating the seat or station of a planet in the heavens. Also called mansion.
11. House music.
v. (houz) housed, hous·ing, hous·es
v.tr.
1. To provide living quarters for; lodge: The cottage housed ten students.
2. To shelter, keep, or store in or as if in a house: a library housing rare books.
3. To contain; harbor.
4. To fit into a socket or mortise.
5. Nautical To secure or stow safely.
v.intr.
1. To reside; dwell.
2. To take shelter.
Idioms:
like a house on fire/afire Informal
In an extremely speedy manner: ran away like a house on fire; tickets that sold like a house afire.
on the house
At the expense of the establishment; free: food and drinks on the house.
put/set (one's) house in order
To organize one's affairs in a sensible, logical way.

[Middle English hous, from Old English hs.]

Houses
the abnormal fear of being in a house.
1. an abnormal fear of home surround-ings.
2. an aversion to home life.

Houses 

See Also: FURNITURE AND FURNISHINGS, ROOMS

  1. [A modern building] all glossy undulations and shining declivities, like a razor haircut in concrete and glass —Jonathan Valin
  2. (The place was) as conspicuously unadorned as a Presbyterian church —Jonathan Valin
  3. (Tenement house with mean little) balconies pulled out one by one like drawers —Vladimir Nabokov
  4. Bricks [in path to front door of house] laid close as your hairs —Sharon Olds
  5. A building long and low like a loaf of bread —Marge Piercy
  6. Buildings as badly painted as old whores —Larry McMurtry
  7. Buildings, lined up like ships —Helen Hudson
  8. Buying a new home is like raising children; there’s always room for improvement —Arlene Zalesky, Newsday/Viewpoints. September 27, 1986
  9. The church has a steeple like the hat of a witch —William H. Gass
  10. (Church) cold, damp and smelly as a tomb —Sean O’Faolain
  11. Cottages looking like something the three little pigs might have built —Sue Grafton
  12. Darkened houses loomed like medieval battlements —J. W. Rider
  13. Decrepit houses lay scattered around the landscape like abandoned machines on a battlefield —Peter Meinke
  14. Door … shut like an angry face —John Updike
  15. A duplex co-op that made Lenny’s [Leonard Bernstein] look like a fourth-floor walkup —Tom Wolfe
  16. An estate without a forest is like a house without a chimney —Sholom Aleichem
  17. A first home, like the person who aroused our initial awakening to sex, holds forever strong sway over our emotions —Dorothea Straus
  18. Frame houses collapsing at their centers like underdone cakes —Jean Thompson
  19. A glass-and-concrete air-conditioned block of a building cantilevered from the hillside like a Swiss sanitorium —Walker Percy
  20. The great glass doors … swished together behind him like an indrawn breath —A. Alvarez
  21. Her house is like her chiffon cakes, all soft surfaces and pleasant colors —Bobbie Ann Mason
  22. A home is like a reservoir equipped with a check valve: the valve permits influx but prevents outflow —E. B. White
  23. A house like this is like some kinds of women, too expensive even —James Hilton
  24. House narrow as a coffin —Angela Carter
  25. Apartments … looking like giant bricks stabbed into the ground —W. P. Kinsella
  26. Houses, like people, have personalities, and like the personalities of people they are partly molded by all that has happened to them —Louis Bromfield
  27. Houses that aged nicely, like a handsome woman —James Crumley
  28. Houses, their doors and windows open, drawing in freshness, were like old drunkards or consumptives taking a cure —Saul Bellow
  29. The house stood like a huge shell, empty and desolate —H. E. Bates
  30. House … trim and fresh as a birdcake and almost as small —William Faulkner
  31. It [house] sat among ten acres of blackberry brambles, like an abandoned radio —Tom Robbins
  32. [A ranch-style house] just too cute for words … it looked as if it had been delivered, already equipped, from a store —Christopher Isherwood
  33. Kept it [an old historic house] up like a museum —Ruth Prawer Jhabvala

    See Also: ORDER/DISORDER

  34. Long rows of apartment houses stood bald and desolate, like sad old prostitutes —Erich Maria Remarque
  35. It [a big building

    looked as bleak as a barracks —Robert Silverberg

  36. Looked as homey and inviting as the House of Usher —Sarah Bird
  37. Houses (seen from belfry) looked like small caskets and boxes jumbled together —Boris Pasternak
  38. A modern building made of … big cubes of concrete like something built by a child —Edna O’Brien
  39. Modern buildings tend to look like call girls who came out of it intact except that their faces are a touch blank and the expression in their eyes is as lively as the tip of a filter cigarette —Norman Mailer
  40. Paint peeled from it [an apartment house] in layers, like a bad sunburn —Paige Mitchell
  41. A peculiar, suggestive heaviness, trapping the swooning buildings in a sweet, solid calm, as if preserving them in honey —Angela Carter
  42. The pink stucco apartment house looked like a cake that was inhabited by hookers about to jump out of it any second —Robert Campbell
  43. A pretty country retreat is like a pretty wife: one is always throwing away money decorating it —Washington Irving
  44. Residences … of brick, whitewashed and looking faintly flushed, like a pretty girl, with the pink of the brick glowing through where the whitewash had worn off —Harvey Swados
  45. Slate roofs … like the backs of pigeons —Don Robertson
  46. Tents sprang up like strange plants. Camp fires, like red, peculiar blossoms, dotted the night —Stephen Crane
  47. Victorian house … shaped like a wedding cake —Laurie Colwin
  48. We require from buildings, as from men, two kinds of goodness: first, the doing their practical day well: then that they be graceful and pleasing in doing it —John Ruskin

houses
  • ginnel - A long narrow passage between houses.
  • row house - Part of an unbroken line or series of houses.
  • domal - Means of or pertaining to a house or houses.
  • vicinal, vicinity - Vicinal, from Latin vicus, "group of houses," means "of or pertaining to a neighborhood"—hence, vicinity.


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On either side, as I advanced, the desolate old houses frowned on me.
There remains to-day but a very imperceptible vestige of the Place de Grève, such as it existed then; it consists in the charming little turret, which occupies the angle north of the Place, and which, already enshrouded in the ignoble plaster which fills with paste the delicate lines of its sculpture, would soon have disappeared, perhaps submerged by that flood of new houses which so rapidly devours all the ancient façades of Paris.
I stepped over the great western gate, and passed very gently, and sidling, through the two principal streets, only in my short waistcoat, for fear of damaging the roofs and eaves of the houses with the skirts of my coat.
 
 
 
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