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[ US /ˈkɑtədʒ, ˈkɑtɪdʒ/ ]
[ UK /kˈɒtɪd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a small house with a single story

How To Use cottage In A Sentence

  • It was her dream to have a little cottage in the country.
  • They'd moved to their cottage a few years ago and ran an electrical business in Didcot.
  • After a quarter of an hour, hot buttered toast on a covered hot water plate, with the Staffordshire cottage tea pot in its floral cosy, arrived.
  • The woman herself lay in Epsom Cottage Hospital for four days without regaining consciousness.
  • The path from Billy's cottage wound down towards the river bank.
  • We passed ancient cottages embowered with climbing roses that Edward Elgar must have known as he cycled here on what he called his "trusty steed". Country diary: Malvern Hills
  • They have innumerable beautiful, barefoot children, live in low-slung, thatched, whitewashed cottages, and their climate is often cool, damp and misty.
  • The chimney, usually of lath and plaster, ending overhead in a cone and funnel for the smoke, was so roomy in old cottages as to accommodate almost the whole family sitting around the fire of logs piled in the reredosse in the middle, and there they carried on their winter's work. The Life of Thomas Telford
  • The row of cottages below and behind you, is known as Irish Row, named after some of the men who worked the mines.
  • On her right stood an empty cottage, fast becoming derelict.
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