coach house
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: 1. A small building for housing coaches and carriages and other vehicles: A coach house is a separate building, often located near a main house or estate, historically used to store horse-drawn coaches, carriages, and related equipment. In modern usage, it often refers to a similar structure that has been converted for other purposes, such as a garage or a living space.
Usage
The term "coach house" specifically refers to the building itself. It is a compound noun. It is used to describe a historical type of outbuilding or its modern adaptation.
Examples
- The estate's original coach house has been preserved and now displays antique carriages.
- They converted the old coach house into a two-car garage.
- Many historic city properties have a coach house at the rear of the garden.
Advanced Usage
- The term can be used metonymically to refer to the converted living space itself, not just the building's original function.
- We're renting the coach house in the back; it's a charming little studio apartment.
Variants and Related Words
- Carriage house: A direct synonym, often used interchangeably with "coach house."
- Coach: (Noun) The horse-drawn vehicle that would have been stored in a coach house.
- Mews: (Noun, chiefly British) A row or street of houses or apartments that were originally built as stables and coach houses, typically behind large city houses.
Synonyms
- Carriage house
- Coach shed
- Hackney house (archaic)
Antonyms
- There is no direct antonym, as it names a specific type of structure. Contrasting concepts might include main house or manor house.
Related Phrases
- Coach house conversion: A common phrase describing the renovation of an old coach house into a modern dwelling or commercial space.
- The property market shows high demand for coach house conversions.
Noun
- a small building for housing coaches and carriages and other vehicles