housing

[ UK /hˈa‍ʊzɪŋ/ ]
[ US /ˈhaʊzɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. structures collectively in which people are housed
  2. a protective cover designed to contain or support a mechanical component
  3. stable gear consisting of a decorated covering for a horse, especially (formerly) for a warhorse
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How To Use housing In A Sentence

  • This facility is intended to help a few hundred families living in public housing by training them to be grocery store clerks.
  • It will be wormed throughout, and parcelled in the wake of the housing-bolt and frapping lashing, and where there is no swell, in the wake of the muzzle-ring. Ordnance Instructions for the United States Navy. 1866. Fourth edition.
  • Winter is traditionally the dead season for the housing market.
  • Would you care to comment on why you voted against the new housing project?
  • Stahl Real Estate has applied to demolish two early 20th century buildings, but preservationists are firing back, arguing that the 190 rent-stabilized and rent-controlled apartments, which sit between 64th and 65th streets near York Avenue, have played a vital role housing lower- and middle-class tenants for nearly a century. New Spat Over Upper East Side Rent
  • The city authorized a housing project.
  • The government cannot ignore Britain's chronic productivity and housing woes. Times, Sunday Times
  • Finally, dissatisfaction with housing conditions produced schemes for slum clearance or improvement and substantial house-building programmes.
  • The most obvious of these powers is that of the demolition and clearance of housing that is deemed unfit for human habitation. Introduction to Social Administration in Britain
  • These structural problems will act as a major constraint on any potential recovery in the housing market.
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