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farmhouse
/ ˈfɑːmˌhaʊs /
noun
- a house attached to a farm, esp the dwelling from which the farm is managed
- Also calledfarmhouse loaf a large white loaf, baked in a tin, with slightly curved sides and top
Word History and Origins
Origin of farmhouse1
Example Sentences
Yet it isn’t the easiest product to shift – particularly farmhouse cheese, most of which tends to be heavy and bulky and must be kept at specific temperatures.
There was sniping in the press that he was hard to tempt away from his farmhouse in Oxford, where he lived with his second wife, Emma, and their three children.
They were known to be comfortably off - more than £2,000 in cash was found in the farmhouse after their deaths and they left £35,000 in savings and investments.
Designs for the residences call for modern farmhouses and Spanish architecture, meant to embrace the heritage of the San Fernando Valley.
The inn itself dated back to the 18th Century when, in 1765, it was built as a farmhouse.
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