town ‧ house /ˈtaʊnhaʊs/ BrE AmE noun [countable]
1 . a house in a town or city, especially a fashionable one in a central area
2 . British English a house in a town that belongs to someone who also owns a house in the countryside:
the Duke’s townhouse in Mayfair
3 . American English a house in a group of houses that share one or more walls
• • •
THESAURUS
▪ house a building that someone lives in, especially one that is intended for one family, person, or couple to live in:
Annie and Rick have just bought their first house.
|
The price of houses is going up all the time.
▪ detached house British English a house that is not joined to another house:
a detached four-bedroomed house
▪ semi-detached house British English a house that is joined to another house on one side
▪ terraced house British English , row house American English one of a row of houses that are joined together
▪ townhouse one of a row of houses that are joined together. In British English, townhouse is often used about a large and impressive house in a fashionable area of a city:
an 18th-century townhouse in Bath
▪ cottage a small house in the country – used especially about houses in the UK:
a little cottage in the country
|
a thatched cottage (=with a roof made of straw)
▪ bungalow a small house that is all on one level:
Bungalows are suitable for many elderly people.
▪ country house a large house in the countryside, especially one that is of historical interest:
The hotel was originally an Edwardian country house.
▪ mansion a very large house:
the family’s Beverly Hills mansion
▪ mobile home ( also trailer American English ) a type of house that can be pulled by a large vehicle and moved to another place
▪ ranch house American English a long narrow house that is all on one level:
a California ranch house
▪ duplex American English a house that is divided into two separate homes