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Dictionary Entries (11 more entries. View all »)
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)Cite This Source
house    Audio Help   [n., adj. hous; v. houz] Pronunciation Key noun, plural hous·es    Audio Help   [hou-ziz] Pronunciation Key, verb, housed, hous·ing, adjective
–noun
1.a building in which people live; residence for human beings.
2.a household.
3.(often initial capital letter) a family, including ancestors and descendants: the great houses of France; the House of Hapsburg.
4.a building for any purpose: a house of worship.
5.a theater, concert hall, or auditorium: a vaudeville house.
6.the audience of a theater or the like.
7.a place of shelter for an animal, bird, etc.
8.the building in which a legislative or official deliberative body meets.
9.(initial capital letter) the body itself, esp. of a bicameral legislature: the House of Representatives.
10.a quorum of such a body.
11.(often initial capital letter) a commercial establishment; business firm: the House of Rothschild; a publishing house.
12.a gambling casino.
13.the management of a commercial establishment or of a gambling casino: rules of the house.
14.an advisory or deliberative group, esp. in church or college affairs.
15.a college in an English-type university.
16.a residential hall in a college or school; dormitory.
17.the members or residents of any such residential hall.
18.Informal. a brothel; whorehouse.
19.British. a variety of lotto or bingo played with paper and pencil, esp. by soldiers as a gambling game.
20.Also called parish. Curling. the area enclosed by a circle 12 or 14 ft. (3.7 or 4.2 m) in diameter at each end of the rink, having the tee in the center.
21.Nautical. any enclosed shelter above the weather deck of a vessel: bridge house; deck house.
22.Astrology. one of the 12 divisions of the celestial sphere, numbered counterclockwise from the point of the eastern horizon.
–verb (used with object)
23.to put or receive into a house, dwelling, or living quarters: More than 200 students were housed in the dormitory.
24.to give shelter to; harbor; lodge: to house flood victims in schools.
25.to provide with a place to work, study, or the like: This building houses our executive staff.
26.to provide storage space for; be a receptacle for or repository of: The library houses 600,000 books.
27.to remove from exposure; put in a safe place.
28.Nautical.
a.to stow securely.
b.to lower (an upper mast) and make secure, as alongside the lower mast.
c.to heave (an anchor) home.
29.Carpentry.
a.to fit the end or edge of (a board or the like) into a notch, hole, or groove.
b.to form (a joint) between two pieces of wood by fitting the end or edge of one into a dado of the other.
–verb (used without object)
30.to take shelter; dwell.
–adjective
31.of, pertaining to, or noting a house.
32.for or suitable for a house: house paint.
33.of or being a product made by or for a specific retailer and often sold under the store's own label: You'll save money on the radio if you buy the house brand.
34.served by a restaurant as its customary brand: the house wine.
35.bring down the house, to call forth vigorous applause from an audience; be highly successful: The children's performances brought down the house.
36.clean house. clean (def. 48).
37.dress the house, Theater.
a.to fill a theater with many people admitted on free passes; paper the house.
b.to arrange or space the seating of patrons in such a way as to make an audience appear larger or a theater or nightclub more crowded than it actually is.
38.keep house, to maintain a home; manage a household.
39.like a house on fire or afire, very quickly; with energy or enthusiasm: The new product took off like a house on fire.
40.on the house, as a gift from the management; free: Tonight the drinks are on the house.
41.put or set one's house in order,
a.to settle one's affairs.
b.to improve one's behavior or correct one's faults: It is easy to criticize others, but it would be better to put one's own house in order first.

[Origin: bef. 900; (n.) ME h(o)us, OE hūs; c. D huis, LG huus, ON hūs, G Haus, Goth -hūs (in gudhūs temple); (v.) ME housen, OE hūsian, deriv. of the n.]

1. domicile. House, dwelling, residence, home are terms applied to a place to live in. Dwelling is now chiefly poetic, or used in legal or technical contexts, as in a lease or in the phrase multiple dwelling. Residence is characteristic of formal usage and often implies size and elegance of structure and surroundings: the private residence of the king. These two terms and house have always had reference to the structure to be lived in. Home has recently taken on this meaning and become practically equivalent to house, the new meaning tending to crowd out the older connotations of family ties and domestic comfort. See also hotel.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)Cite This Source
hous·ing2    Audio Help   [hou-zing] Pronunciation Key
–noun
1.a covering of cloth for the back and flanks of a horse or other animal, for protection or ornament.
2.housings. the trappings on a horse.

[Origin: 1635–45; cf. earlier house, ME hous(e), houc(e) in same sense < OF houce < Gmc *hulfti- (cf. ML hultia), akin to MD hulfte cover for bow and arrow, MHG hulft covering; -ing1 added by assoc. with house, housing1]
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)Cite This Source
hous·ing1    Audio Help   [hou-zing] Pronunciation Key
–noun
1.any shelter, lodging, or dwelling place.
2.houses collectively.
3.the act of one who houses or puts under shelter.
4.the providing of houses for a group or community: the housing of an influx of laborers.
5.anything that covers or protects.
6.Machinery. a fully enclosed case and support for a mechanism.
7.Carpentry. the space made in one piece of wood, or the like, for the insertion of another.
8.Nautical.
a.Also called bury. the portion of a mast below the deck.
b.Also called bury. the portion of a bowsprit aft of the forward part of the stem of a vessel.
c.the doubling of an upper mast.
9.a niche for a statue.

[Origin: 1250–1300; ME husing. See house, -ing1]

5. covering, casing, shield, sheath.
Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1)
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.

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Thesaurus Entries
  Synonym Collection v1.1Cite This Source
Main Entry:  housing
Part of Speech:  noun
Synonyms:  box, casing, covering, dwelling, frame, lodging, niche, pad, protection, shelter, accommodations
Source:  Synonym Collection v1.1
Copyright © 2008 by Lexico Publishing Group, LLC.
  Roget's II: The New ThesaurusCite This Source
Main Entry:  shelter
Part of Speech:  noun
Definition:  Dwellings in general.
Synonyms:  lodging
Idioms:  a roof over one's head
Source:  Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, Third Edition
by the Editors of the American Heritage® Dictionary.
Copyright © 2003, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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Encyclopedia Articles (529 more entries. View all »)
Columbia Electronic EncyclopediaCite This Source


housing, in general, living accommodations available for the inhabitants of a community. Throughout the 19th cent., with the advent of the Industrial Revolution, housing as a problem worsened as urban populations expanded. The crowding of cities and factory towns by workers led not only to severe housing shortages but also to the deterioration of existing housing and the growth of slums. The problem was aggravated by the erection of substandard housing for workers and by speculators seeking high profits.

Reforms in Great Britain

Inadequate housing for the increasing urban population led, in the mid-19th cent. in Great Britain, to the development of a reform movement. Humanitarian and philanthropic groups first took up the cause of workers' housing. The Society for Improving the Dwellings of the Labouring Classes was established in 1845 and was followed by similar organizations dedicated to the building of low-rent dwellings. Ultimately, public opinion encouraged Parliament to pass (1851) the Shaftesbury Acts (the Labouring Classes Lodging Houses Acts). They provided for the construction of lodging houses according to certain minimum standards.

Slum clearance began with the Torrens Act of 1868, which provided for the demolition or improvement of unsanitary dwellings. After the turn of the century much was done in Great Britain toward eliminating slums and constructing model tenements; the garden city was one solution offered to the housing problem. The first Housing and Town Planning Act in 1909 granted local governments the power to oversee housing development. The large-scale destruction of housing during World War II resulted in severe shortages after 1945; between 1945 and 1970 about 7 million new dwellings were built in Great Britain.

Reforms in the United States

In the United States, housing problems—in particular the growth of slums—became acute during the 19th cent. in the cities of the eastern seaboard and in the larger Midwestern cities. A leading cause was the heavy immigration from Europe that began in the middle of the 19th cent. and reached a peak at the turn of the century. The first housing law (the 1867 New York City tenement house law) was revised in 1879 to prohibit windowless rooms. The findings of a tenement house commission resulted in a new law in 1901, requiring better provision for light and ventilation, fire protection, and sanitation. Most U.S. city and state housing laws in the following years were based on those of New York City.

Until World War I there was no government housing in the United States. Then temporary dwellings were put up for defense workers. The U.S. government lapsed into almost complete inaction with regard to building housing until the advent of the New Deal. The National Housing Act (1934) created the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) to undertake a nationwide system of home loan insurance. It also established, by means of mortgage insurance regulation, minimum standards for construction, for design, and for location.

Low-cost housing projects, including farm-family homes sponsored by the Resettlement Administration, were coordinated in 1937 under the U.S. Housing Authority, which financed urban low-rent and slum clearance developments by making loans at low interest rates. Such loans were later extended to rural housing. The Lanham Act (1940) authorized federal operation of a large-scale housing program for defense workers.

To unify the many federal housing agencies, President Roosevelt created (1942) the National Housing Agency, which included the Federal Public Housing Authority, the Federal Home Loan Bank Administration, and the FHA. But the total wartime construction of permanent homes was far below peacetime levels, while the demand for housing rose sharply with a high marriage rate, migration from farms to cities, greater buying power, and later the return of veterans. Complicated by building codes, union practices, and labor and material shortages, the housing deficiency remained serious after the war, and federal rent controls continued for some time.

A national housing policy began to emerge when Congress passed the Housing Acts of 1949 and 1954, aimed at easing the housing shortage and eliminating slums; their goal was a decent home for every family. The Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965 created a separate cabinet-level Dept. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). In 1966 the Model Cities Act coordinated government assistance to selected low-income areas of cities.

Housing since then often has been caught up in debate over rent controls, homelessness, the failure of savings and loan associations, and the buying and selling of political influence by government administrators and building developers. From 1980 to 1987, 2.5 million low-cost housing units were lost, and the federal government reduced its subsidies for construction by 60%. In response, some private groups like Habitat for Humanity have tried to help individuals buy and renovate low-cost housing. Housing advocates have argued for public housing reform, including controls on speculation and on rent (about 36% of occupied U.S. housing units are rentals).

Housing Problems in Other Countries

After World War II, the countries of continental Europe faced acute housing shortages. Most postwar efforts were directed at rebuilding major industries, and house construction suffered as a result. However, once the economies were stable, attention turned to housing. In most countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America, urban housing shortages are today particularly severe as a result of population increases, rapid urbanization, and the migration from rural areas to cities. It is estimated that in Latin America alone, four or five million families live in substandard urban dwellings. The depressed economies and social inequities of many governments have worked against development of adequate housing programs.

Bibliography

See J. Jacobs, Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961); P. Wendt, Housing Policy: Search for Solutions, a Comparison of the United Kingdom, Sweden, West Germany, and the United States since World War II (1962); J. B. Cullingworth, Housing and Labour Mobility (1969); R. W. Bolling, Housing Development and Urban Planning (1970); M. Safdie, Beyond Habitat (1970); R. Goodman, After the Planners (1971); M. Pawley, Architecture versus Housing (1971); D. R. Mandelstam and R. Montgomery, Housing in America (1973); O. Newman, Defensible Space: Crime Prevention Through Urban Design (1973); C. Hartman, Housing Issues of the 1990s (1989); M. Wolkoff, Housing New York (1991).

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