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Looking for synonyms for "cottage"? Browse alternatives ranked by relevance — sharper word choices for fiction, poetry, and copywriting.
(n)
A single-storey house, typically with rooms all on one level, or sometimes also with upper rooms set into the roof space.
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The passenger area of an airplane.
A building for recreational use such as a hunting lodge or a summer cabin.
A house, often larger and more expensive than average, in the countryside or on the coast, often used as a retreat.
An alpine style of wooden building with a sloping roof and overhanging eaves.
A crude, roughly built hut or cabin.
A structure built or serving as an abode of human beings.
A large luxurious house or building, usually built for the wealthy.
A light roofed structure used as a shelter in a public place.
A place where people go for recreation, especially one with facilities such as lodgings, entertainment, and a relaxing environment.
The place where one lives (resides); one's home.
(adj)
Made at home.
A skilled manual worker who uses tools and machinery in a particular craft.
A trade requiring skill of hand; manual occupation; handcraft.
A piece of cloth, often decorated with an emblem, used as a visual signal or symbol.
A low sled drawn by animals, typically on snow, ice or grass.
A building at the edge of a river, lake or other body of water in which boats are kept.
Collectively, all the persons who live in a given house; a family including attendants, servants etc.; a domestic or family establishment.
A series of operations undertaken to achieve a set goal.
The act of pulling back or withdrawing, as from something dangerous, or unpleasant.
Someone connected by blood, marriage, or adoption; someone in the same family.
A small, simple one-storey dwelling or shelter, often with just one room, and generally built of readily available local materials.
A house owned not as a primary residence and used as vacation home during warm weather months of the year.
A Russian villa or summer house in the countryside.
A roughly-built hut or cabin.
(US) A small, attached but self-contained house or apartment.
A house together with surrounding land and buildings, especially on a farm; the property comprising these.
A house (usually the main house) on a farm; thus:
(military) An encampment of huts.
A small structure built to contain domesticated animals such as sheep, pigs or pigeons.
A French holiday home, or a rented tourist cottage.
A shelter with a sloped roof; also a building with a similar construction attached to the side of a building as an extension.
(Canada, US, Australia) A shelter on a beach or at a swimming pool.
(now historical) A small country or suburban residence, typically with verandahs and French windows.
A little house.
A small house.
A group of advisors to a government or business entity.
an apartment often on two floors
A shepherd's hut or shieling.
(rare) A small cabin.
(Canada, US) A cottage rented out in the summer to vacationers.
A private house offering accommodation to paying guests; a boarding house; a bed and breakfast.
A set of furniture consisting of a two-seater sofa and two or more armchairs.
A small castle.
A public building or room for gambling.
A little home.
A shady, leafy shelter or recess in a garden or woods.
(Scotland) A two-roomed cottage; a small house or shack
A summerhouse.
(US) A baby’s bed with high, often slatted, often moveable sides, suitable for a child who has outgrown a cradle or bassinet.
A small building where cooking takes place.
Alternative form of guesthouse. [A small house near a main house, for lodging visitors.]
A little hut.
A dwelling made from logs; especially, a small and simple one.
Alternative form of cookhouse. [A small building where cooking takes place.]
(US, slang) A brothel.
A little villa.
A structure built of cob.
An outdoor place acting as temporary accommodation in tents or other simple structures.
(slang) house
A building housing a school, especially a small or single-room one.
A small house or room.
Alternative form of lodgehouse. [Synonym of lodge (“type of building”).]
A child's play house.
(Canada, US) An outbuilding, typically permanent, containing a toilet or seat over a cesspit.
Any small house or structure or enclosure used to house a dog.
A small crude shelter; a hovel; a cottage; a hut.
Synonym of lodge (“type of building”).
One of a set of low-rise apartment buildings built among landscaped grounds and often arranged around courtyards that are open at one end.
A bunkmate, someone with whom one shares a bunk bed.
A garden apartment.
A building with small, basic, inexpensive apartments for rent, often without en suite bathrooms.
A box in which shooting or hunting equipment is stored.
(dated) A doll's house.
(Politics, obsolete) The House of Commons.
A river in Norfolk, England.
(architecture) A small recessed area set off from a larger room.
A second home in a rural area, especially one of a rich, powerful or important person.
A commercial overnight lodging place, with dormitory accommodation and shared facilities, especially a youth hostel.
Something to be sat upon.
(New Zealand) A small hut, especially for a man living alone.
A smaller temporary or secondary lodging; a second home, especially one in the city.
A small cave.
A small building, usually located next to a larger house, used as a kitchen in warm weather.
An inn or hostel.
A small building for sheltering sheep.