cottage - definitie. Wat is cottage
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Wat (wie) is cottage - definitie

TYPICALLY, A SMALL HOUSE
Cottages; Weekend cottage; Summer cottage; Cabin (housing); Hunting cabin; Cabin house; Stuga; English Cottage; English Cottage Revival; Hytte
  •  A typical Soviet [[dacha]] (summer house) in Resheti.
  • A common sight in the west of Ireland – a 19th-century stone teachín – in Carrigmanus, [[County Cork]]
  • Swedish cottage in Ljusterö, Stockholm.
  • holiday homes]].<ref>[https://yle.fi/uutiset/3-11275436 YLE: Jopa kymmenet tuhannet siirtyneet kesämökeilleen vetoomuksista huolimatta, suosittujen mökkikuntien ruokakaupoissa jopa 50 prosentin kasvuja] (in Finnish)</ref> The picture was taken in [[Mäntyharju]].
  • 19th century coal miners' cottages rebuilt at the [[Beamish Museum]].
  • A cottage in [[Vihti]], southern Finland
  • Cottage built c. 1640, near [[Swedesboro, New Jersey]]
  • A typical cottage in Devon, with walls built of cob and a thatched roof.
  • A contemporary Australian cabin (cottage)
  • Tŷ Hyll}}) near [[Betws-Y-Coed]], a famous example of a ''tŷ unnos''.
  • A traditional 'langhuis' (long cottage) cottage in Verloren Vlei Heritage Village in the [[Western Cape]] region of South Africa
  • [[Wolters Filling Station]] in [[Davenport, Iowa]]; an example of an English Cottage-style gas station
  • Mikhaylovka]], Volgograd Oblast).

cottage         
(cottages)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
A cottage is a small house, usually in the country.
They used to have a cottage in N.W. Scotland...
My sister Yvonne also came to live at Ockenden Cottage with me.
N-COUNT; N-IN-NAMES
cottage         
n.
Cot, lodge, hut, casino, small house.
cottage         
¦ noun
1. a small, simple house, typically one in the country.
2. informal (in the context of casual homosexual encounters) a public toilet.
¦ verb [usu. as noun cottaging] informal perform homosexual acts in a public toilet.
Derivatives
cottagey adjective
Origin
ME: from Anglo-Norman Fr. cotage and Anglo-Latin cotagium, from cot2 or cote.

Wikipedia

Cottage

A cottage, during England's feudal period, was the holding by a cottager (known as a cotter or bordar) of a small house with enough garden to feed a family and in return for the cottage, the cottager had to provide some form of service to the manorial lord. However, in time cottage just became the general term for a small house. In modern usage, a cottage is usually a modest, often cosy dwelling, typically in a rural or semi-rural location and not necessarily in England. The cottage orné, often quite large and grand residences built by the nobility, dates back to a movement of "rustic" stylised cottages of the late 18th and early 19th century during the Romantic movement.

In British English the term now denotes a small dwelling of traditional build, although it can also be applied to modern construction designed to resemble traditional houses ("mock cottages"). Cottages may be detached houses, or terraced, such as those built to house workers in mining villages. The tied accommodation provided to farm workers was usually a cottage, see cottage garden. In England the term holiday cottage now denotes a specialised form of residential let property, attracting various tax benefits to the owner.

The holiday cottage exists in many cultures under different names. In American English, "cottage" is one term for such holiday homes, although they may also be called a "cabin", "chalet", or even "camp". In Australia, the term "cabin" is common, cottage usually referring to a smaller pre-modern period dwelling. In certain countries (e.g. Nordics, Baltics, and Russia) the term "cottage" has local synonyms: In Finnish mökki, in Estonian suvila, in Latvian vasarnīca, in Livonian sõvvõkuodā, in Swedish stuga, in Norwegian hytte (from the German word Hütte), in Czech or Slovak chata or chalupa, in Russian дача (dacha, which can refer to a vacation/summer home, often located near a body of water).

In places such as Canada, "cottage" carries no connotations of size (compare with vicarage or hermitage).

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor cottage
1. Think of it as a cottage industry, and a very large cottage at that.
2. Jessups Cottage is a wonderful West Country Grade II listed thatched cottage full of character.
3. The property is 100 parklike acres and includes a one–bedroom guest cottage and a two–bedroom cottage.
4. It‘s a cottage – a cream four–storey cottage with venetian windows, a balcony and an ugly roof extension circa 1'68.
5. I never thought you‘d squeeze Nancy into a cottage, even a cottage with a name, which is painted not in neon, but in chunky cream letters.