open house

NOUN
  1. an informal party of people with hospitality for all comers
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How To Use open house In A Sentence

  • If you're selling your home, you may want to attend open houses to collect information about the competition in the area, says Joseph C. Magdziarz , president of the Appraisal Institute, a professional association that represents real-estate appraisers. It Can Pay to Snoop on Neighbors
  • Parents are invited to attend the open house next Thursday.
  • At the company's Norfolk, Va., location, the sales force held an open house with a homecoming theme and tailgate party.
  • Open House London Close to St. James Park is the normally off-limits Victorian-era Foreign Office and Indian Office complex, whose highlight—the dazzling Italy-meets-India Durbar Court—is a three-story riot of Doric and Ionic columns capped by a magnificently frescoed vaulted ceiling. Open House
  • I was hosting an open house and the usual neighbors came trapesing through out of curiosity.
  • Participants of the open house, held from 3 to 8 p.m., will have the opportunity to shop, eat, listen to live music and enjoy holiday activities such as hayrack rides, pictures with Santa and caroling. Minot Daily News
  • Father Illtyd kept open house and the boys would congregate in his study during their recreation time, playing cards or games.
  • The trial reenactment, which is being scripted by Assistant District Attorney Sandra L. Hautanen, will be part of an open house beginning at 4 p.m. June 4 at Worcester's new courthouse. Undefined
  • Father Illtyd kept open house and the boys would congregate in his study during their recreation time, playing cards or games.
  • These wretches undismayed, unmoved by the terrors of the bombarding ravages around, strove and vied with each other in the committal of every act of the most unlicensed ferocity and depredation, breaking open houses, assaulting the inmates, murdering such as shewed resistance, denuding the more submissive of their clothing, abusing women — particularly in the Jewish quarter — to all which atrocities the Europeans were likewise exposed. Travels in Morocco
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