Learn English Words for Houses and Other Places To Live
Check Your Vocabulary
- Here is a list of English words for different types of places to live.
- Read the words, and click on the pictures to learn how to pronounce them.
- A flat is a place to live that shares a building with lots of other homes.
- A tower block is a tall building containing lots of flats (or apartments).
- Blocks of flats often have lifts as well as stairs that serve the upper floors.
A FLAT
- A row of houses joined together is called a terrace.
- Mid-terraced houses have houses on either side.
- End terraced houses are only joined to one other house.
A TERRACED HOUSE
- A semi-detached house (or semi) is a house joined to another house.
- Semi-detached houses are built as a pair, joined together by one wall.
- Three bedroomed semis are the most popular house type in the UK.
A SEMI-DETACHED HOUSE
- A detached house is a house that isn’t joined to other houses.
- Detached houses have empty space on all sides.
- Detached houses are usually bigger than other houses.
A DETACHED HOUSE
- A bungalow is a low, single storey house. It only has rooms on the ground floor.
- Bungalows are ideal for disabled people, and are popular with older people.
- British people sometimes buy a bungalow to live in when they retire.
A BUNGALOW
- A hall of residence is a building designed for students to live in.
- Students typically rent rooms or flats in halls to live in during term time.
- The American English word for student housing is a dorm, or dormitory.
HALLS OF RESIDENCE
- A houseboat is a floating home.
- Some houseboats have engines and can travel up and down waterways.
- Other houseboats are permanently fixed to land near a river.
A HOUSEBOAT
- A mobile home is a house that can be moved to another place.
- Another word for a mobile home is caravan.
- The American English word for this type of home is a trailer.
A MOBILE HOME
- A hotel is a place to stay for one or more nights.
- Hotels are often used by people who are travelling.
- Bed and Breakfast (B & B) hotels are sometimes used for emergency housing.
A HOTEL
- A hostel is a temporary place to stay for one or more nights.
- Youth hostels are hostels for older teenagers and young adults.
- Homeless people sometimes stay in hostels while they are waiting to be housed.
A HOSTEL
Memory Matching Game
This matching quiz will help you learn and revise British English words for places to live and stay.
Instructions
Click on a card to start the game. Find the words and pictures that go together.
Click the ‘new game’ button to play the game again with a different set of words.
Check Your Vocabulary
- Here is a list of English words for different types of places to live.
- Read the words, and click on the pictures to learn how to pronounce them.
- A flat is a place to live that shares a building with lots of other homes.
- A tower block is a tall building containing lots of flats (or apartments).
- Blocks of flats often have lifts as well as stairs that serve the upper floors.
A FLAT
- A row of houses joined together is called a terrace.
- Mid-terraced houses have houses on either side.
- End terraced houses are only joined to one other house.
A TERRACED HOUSE
- A semi-detached house (or semi) is a house joined to another house.
- Semi-detached houses are built as a pair, joined together by one wall.
- Three bedroomed semis are the most popular house type in the UK.
A SEMI-DETACHED HOUSE
- A detached house is a house that isn’t joined to other houses.
- Detached houses have empty space on all sides.
- Detached houses are usually bigger than other houses.
A DETACHED HOUSE
- A bungalow is a low, single storey house. It only has rooms on the ground floor.
- Bungalows are ideal for disabled people, and are popular with older people.
- British people sometimes buy a bungalow to live in when they retire.
A BUNGALOW
- A hall of residence is a building designed for students to live in.
- Students typically rent rooms or flats in halls to live in during term time.
- The American English word for student housing is a dorm, or dormitory.
HALLS OF RESIDENCE
- A houseboat is a floating home.
- Some houseboats have engines and can travel up and down waterways.
- Other houseboats are permanently fixed to land near a river.
A HOUSEBOAT
- A mobile home is a house that can be moved to another place.
- Another word for a mobile home is caravan.
- The American English word for this type of home is a trailer.
A MOBILE HOME
- A hotel is a place to stay for one or more nights.
- Hotels are often used by people who are travelling.
- Bed and Breakfast (B & B) hotels are sometimes used for emergency housing.
A HOTEL
- A hostel is a temporary place to stay for one or more nights.
- Youth hostels are hostels for older teenagers and young adults.
- Homeless people sometimes stay in hostels while they are waiting to be housed.
A HOSTEL
Memory Matching Game
This matching quiz will help you learn and revise British English words for places to live and stay.
Instructions
Click on a card to start the game. Find the words and pictures that go together.
Click the ‘new game’ button to play the game again with a different set of words.
10000+ результатов для ‘the place you live’
The place where you live.
Пропущенное слово
от Victoriaalex
9-й класс
English
B1
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Place where you live
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Place where you live
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от Ekaterina26
Place where you live
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от Oborisova
The place where I live
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от Chernikova2
Kids box 4
The place we live
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от Kseni
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от Tofito
A place you live in
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от Fere
The place we live in
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от Yulia74
Vocabulary (place where you live)
Случайные карты
от Languagelabteach
Question about place you live
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от U38067358
Place where you live(vocabulary)
Случайные карты
от Languagelabteach
city
Откройте поле
от Voronetsiv
4 grade
Movers
Where do you live
the place we live in
Сопоставить
от Transryan
4-й класс
The place we live in (Tag questions)
Викторина
от Yulia74
the place we live in
Сопоставить
от Natali1408
4-й класс
English
the place we live in
Сопоставить
от Transryan
4-й класс
English
the place we live in
Анаграмма
от Natali1408
4-й класс
English
The place we live in
Привести в порядок
от Yulia74
the place we live in
Сопоставить
от Natali1408
4-й класс
English
The place we live in
Угадай буквы
от Borodavkina
The place we live in
Случайное колесо
от Constantineegorov
adjectives for describing place were you live
Групповая сортировка
от Englishteacherru
Where do you live?
Викторина
от Voronetsiv
4 grade
Movers
Where do you leave
where do you live?
Пропущенное слово
от Voronetsiv
4 grade
Movers
Where do you live
The place we live in (Unit 20)
Сопоставить
от Yulia74
Vocabulary. The Place where we live
Угадай буквы
от Smolenskayaelen
Beрещагина 5 класс
The place we live in part 2
Откройте поле
от Nastenka1551
WSpC The place we live in Discussion
Откройте поле
от Welcometeam
Ac.St 2 Speaking about Place where you live
Откройте поле
от Ivanovaanastasi
The place where I live part 3
Пропущенное слово
от Senab
the place we live in 4 класс
Анаграмма
от Natali1408
4-й класс
English
The place where I live part 1
Пропущенное слово
от Senab
The place where I live (questions)
Флэш-карты
от Winterpale
5-й класс
WSpC The place we live in. Binomials
Сопоставить
от Welcometeam
4 класс (The place we live in)
Случайные карты
от Oksana12
The place where I live part 2
Пропущенное слово
от Senab
The place we live in (revision , all words)
Сопоставить
от Yulia74
The place we live in 4th form
Ударь крота
от Ikatarina33
5A Do you like the town you live? (ex.9)
Пропущенное слово
от Jzhprana
Solutions Elementary
unit 3 sec 1 We like the place we live
Диаграмма с метками
от Natakostova
Spotlight 4
Answer the questions about where you live
Случайные карты
от Oxana10
ANSWER THE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE CITY WHERE YOU LIVE
Случайное колесо
от Voron1
Can you
Откройте поле
от Totoroteacher
Can
Can you…
unit 3 sec 1 We like the place we live
Сопоставить
от Natakostova
Spotlight 4
WSpC The place we live in Vocabulary set 1
Случайные карты
от Welcometeam
WSpC The place we live in Vocabulary set 2
Флэш-карты
от Welcometeam
WSpC The place we live in. Binomials. Discussion
Случайное колесо
от Welcometeam
A place to live anagram
Анаграмма
от Irishtacey
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от Tanyasolovey
A place to live
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Place to live
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от Zemsvet
place to live
Сопоставить
от Miramguli
Where the heart is (vocabulary describing places you live)
Флэш-карты
от Wordwallstudent
Where do you live?
Погоня в лабиринте
от Marina21
Powered by RedCircle
Welcome
Hello and welcome to Learn English Vocabulary. My name is Jack and I’m making this podcast for you to learn or revise English vocabulary.
These podcasts are graded from A2 which is around lower intermediate all the way to C2 which is advanced.
I hope you find these podcasts useful. If you do, please leave me a rating and review as this will help other learners find these podcasts.
Introduction
This podcast is B1 which means the vocabulary I’m going to talk about should be good for intermediate learners. Today, I’m going to talk about houses. I have lived in all sorts of homes, in quite a few different countries and the words we use to describe where we live are quite interesting. So to start, let’s talk about the word home. You see, your home is the place you live permanently. It’s an interesting word, because it means that you think of the place you live as a permanent place to live. If you stay in a flat for a short period, say a few months, it’s just the place you live. It’s only your home, when it feels like your home.
Houses
The next word is house. This is really the most simple word for a place to live. I guess the alternative is flat. In British English you could be asked if you live in a house or a flat. A flat is normally a place to live that takes up part of a larger building. It’s normally on one level of the building. A house doesn’t have any other place to live or work beneath it or above it.
There are three main types of house. You can get a detached house. This is a house with no other house connected to it. You can often walk all the way around a detached house. Then there’s a semi-detached house, in informal speech, people often just say semi. This means that the house is attached to one other house. It’s like a big detached house split down the middle. And then there’s a terraced house which is when a group of houses are built in a row so each house has a neighbour on both sides.
In cities, it’s common to find areas with rows and rows of terraced houses. In regular towns in the UK, most houses are on housing estates. These are areas where lots of houses of the same type and similar design are built near each other. Some estates are full of small houses that are packed closely together and some have much bigger houses with more space and bigger gardens.
Flats
For flats, you can live in a block of flats which is what people call older buildings of flats. In London, there are tower blocks which have hundreds of flats. Some of these blocks used to have bad reputations and were dangerous to visit if you weren’t from the area. These days, I think that all the property in London is so valuable that I can’t imagine they are still like that.
Modern blocks of flats are called apartment buildings or complexes or developments and sometimes they are really very nice. I went to visit an apartment complex in Manchester that had nice flats or apartments and really good communal facilities. Communal facilities are things for all the people in the flat to share. There was a gym and a swimming pool and some other areas where you could meet friends.
OK, so those are the main terms. Flat, house, detected house, semi-detached house or semi and terraced house. I’ve also described housing estates and communal facilities. The next terms I’m going to talk about are cottage, mansion, residence, country estate, and then the adjectives Victorian, Georgian, Tudor and timber-framed.
Cottages
Cottage is a nice word because it really just means a small house, but if you say you live in a cottage, it makes people think it’s nice and cosy. We normally think of cottages in the country, perhaps with a thatched roof. A thatched roof is a roof made of straw or dried plants.
Mansions
A mansion is a really big house. The word is not really used by the owners of mansions. It’s used by people who live in much smaller, less imposing homes to indicate that a house is impressive and possibly a bit ostentatious – that is a bit showy or over the top. People who live in houses like these call their homes residences. Now, technically, a residence is a place where you reside or live. I think that it’s the official term for a home. If you look on a property website and search for the most expensive houses, they are always described as residences. For example, a handsome detached residence or a stunning family residence. The most expensive properties come with acres of land and they are described as country
When was your house built?
The last bits of vocabulary I want to describe are adjectives we use in the UK to say how old our homes are. If you know when the property was built, you also know something about how it will look. During the 1800s, or at least from 1837, Queen Victoria was the Queen of England and at that time, loads of houses were built. If you have a Victorian house, it will usually be made of brick and have high ceilings and bay windows.
If your house was built between 1714 and 1830, possibly until 1837, your house is Georgian. These houses have flat fronts and tall windows. They are very sensible looking houses. They also have high ceilings and big rooms and are highly sought after.
If your house is older than that then there are special phrases like restoration and jacobean but most people don’t know what they mean, until you get to Tudor houses. There are lots of houses in the UK that were built in the Tudor period between 1485 and 1603. These houses have timber frames with parts of the timber showing from the outside. They are sometimes called black and white houses or timber-framed houses. Most often, they are called Tudor houses. I have lived in a couple of Tudor houses and they are pretty wonky inside but are otherwise nice places to live.
Conclusion
So there are lots of nouns and adjectives to talk about where you live. I hope you have found them interesting and useful.
If you have enjoyed this podcast, please leave me a comment or a review and don’t forget that you can read the transcript for this podcast and complete some language activities on LearnEnglishVocabulary.co.uk.
Thanks for listening.
ENGLISH VOCABULARY IN USE PRE INTERMEDIATE
UNIT 17 THE
PLACE WHERE YOU LIVE
A |
Location* “We live on the outskirts of town1, and it’s a very |
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B |
Our flat
|
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C |
|
EXERCISES
17.1 |
Are the sentences about the people on the opposite page true or 1 They live in a house. _______ 2 They used to live on the 3 They own their flat. _____________________________ 4 They’ve got nice views 5 They live on the first 6 There’s a lift in the 7 A French couple live downstairs. 8 They own a cottage. _____________________________ 9 The cottage has lots of 10 The cottage is quite |
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17.2 |
Are these
|
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17.3 |
Label |
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17.4 |
Complete the sentences. 1 Our flat doesn’t have air __________ 2 I live _____________ the 3 My old flat was very 4 The flat’s in a great _____________: 5 We live on the _____________ 6 The flat is on the third 7 It’s a very big house, so 8 I’m on the second _____________. 9 I live in Paris. I used to 10 I love my apartment. It |
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17.5 |
|
ANSWER KEY
Write about the place where you live. Use these words:
a lot of
some
not many
a few
no
houses
offices
parks
schools
shops
fields
cars
cafés
cinemas
lorries
trees
libraries
factories
farms
theatres
bikes
buses
gardens
hotels
flats
hospitals
reshalka.com
ГДЗ Английский язык 5 класс FORWARD рабочая тетрадь Вербицкая. UNIT 14. Islands of the South Pacific. Номер №3
Решение
Перевод задания
Напишите о месте, где живете. Используйте эти слова:
много
несколько
не много
несколько
нет
дома
офисы
парки
школы
магазины
поля
машины
кафе
кинотеатры
грузовики
деревья
библиотеки
заводы
фермы
театры
велосипеды
автобусы
сады
гостиницы
квартиры
больницы
ОТВЕТ
Nizhny Novgorod is a good place to live. It’s a big city. It’s very beautiful and clean. There are a lot of historic houses and high buildings. There are many offices in our city. There are a lot of parks in the city. There is a zoo with lake and some exotic animals. There are some farms near the city. There are a lot of trains and buses. There are some factories in the city. There are theatres, cinemas and some hotels in the city.
Перевод ответа
Нижний Новгород − хорошее место для жизни. Это большой город. Он очень красивый и чистый. Здесь много исторических домов и высоких зданий. В нашем городе много офисов. В городе много парков. Есть зоопарк с озером и экзотическими животными. Рядом с городом есть фермы. Очень много поездов и автобусов. В городе есть несколько заводов. В городе есть театры, кинотеатры и несколько отелей.
Hello, dear student! Today I would like to devote time and give consideration to a very important topic, which we often use in conversation — story about our home or description of the place where we live.
It is important to note, that we need a wide range of adjectives and knowledge on our favorite cases. For a start, let’s look at the most common adjectives which we can use to describe our house:
- Новый [Novyj] — New
- Большой [Bal’shoj] — Big
- Просторный [Prastornyj] — Specious
- Многоквартирный [Mnagakvartirnyj] — Apartment house
- Одноэтажный [Adnaekhtajnyj] — One-story building/house
- Многоэтажный [Mnagaekhtajnyj] — Multi-storey
- Тесный [Tesnyj] — Cramped
- Светлый [Svetlyj] — Light
- Темный [Tyomnyj] — Dark
- Старый [Staryj] — Old
- Модный [Modnyj] — Fashionable/ in trend
- Удобный [Udobnyj] — Comfortable
- Красивый [Krasivyj] — Beautiful/nice/lovely
- Уютный [Ujutnyj] — Cosy
- Холодный [Khalodnyj] — Cold
- Тёплый [Tyoplyj] — Warm
For example:
Я живу в многоэтажном доме. Моя квартира новая. [Ya zhivu v mnagaetazhnam dome. Maya kvartira novaya] — I live in a multi-story building. My flat/apartment is new.
В моей квартире очень уютно. [V maej kvartire ochen’ ujutna] — It is quite cosy there in my flat/apartment.
Мой дом очень холодный, но зимой тут тепло. [Moj dom ochin’ khalodnyj, no zimoj tut tiplo] — It is very cold there in my house, but in winter it’s warm.
Я хочу купить себе красивую, модную квартиру [Ya khachu kupit’ sibe krasivuju, modnuju kvartiru] — I want to buy a nice, trendy flat for me.
To describe the material which our flat or house is made from, we need the following words: nouns and adjectives which show what material our house or its part is made from:
- Кирпич/кирпичный [kirpich/kirpichnyy] — brick
- Железо/железный [zhileza/zhileznyy] — iron
- Стекло/стеклянный [stiklo/stiklyannyy] — glass
- Бетон/бетонный [biton/bitonnyy] — concrete
- Дерево/деревянный [deriva/dirivyannyy] — wood/wooden
- Алюминий/ алюминиевый [alyuminiy/alyuminiivyy] — aluminium
For example,
Стены в моем доме выполнены из бетона [Steny v majom dome vypalneny iz bitona] — The walls in my house are made fr om concrete.
Or
У нас в доме бетонные стены [U nas v dome bitonye steny] — There are concrete walls in our house.
In the first case, the word «бетон» (concrete) is a noun, in the second one — an adjective.
Thus, you can make sentences interchanging material and make sentences as with nouns, as with adjectives.
Now let’s turn to our cases. Please, pay attention, we will need the prepositional case very much, that’s why it’s necessary to review the topic on cases, if you are not sure in your knowledge.
When someone asks you:
— Где ты живёшь? [Gde ty zhivyosh?] — Wh ere do you live?
You should answer, for example:
— Я живу в старой квартире [Ya zhivu f staraj kvartire] — I live in the old flat.
Pay attention that the word «квартира» (a flat) is in the prepositional case, because we ask the question: в чём? Certainly, you can use the interrogative word «где?», but this question is for more advanced students.
You should also remember, that the word «дом» [dom] has different stresses depending on number and declension, for example:
дома‘ [dama΄] — houses
до‘ма [do΄ma] — at home
в до‘ме [f do΄me] — in the house
If
you
love yourself, the place you live,
you
will do for this
place
all
you
best.
Будете любить себя, будете любить место, в котором живете,- значит будете делать для этого
места
все возможное,
все самое лучшее.
In everyday life,
you
know who
you
are… the place you live, your career, your religion, how
you
were raised.
В повседневной жизни
вы
знаете, кто вы… место, в котором вы живете, свою карьеру, религию, как
вас
вырастили.
But still the place you live in is that much more drab and empty that they’re gone.
Но тем не менее… место, где живешь, становится скучнее и опустошенней, когда они улетают.
Do friends or family members smoke in your house or place where you live?
Today it is extremely important to be a conscientious citizen in a place where you live and work.
Сегодня чрезвычайно важно быть сознательным гражданином в месте, где ты живешь и работаешь.
Archaeology is a profession that demands devotion— to explore and understand your home, environment, the place where you live, and the people who
исследуешь и лучше понимаешь свой дом, окружающую среду, местность, где ты живешь, и людей, которые до
тебя
здесь
жили.
This is great
when
you
have an opportunity to find out more about the place you live and work in,
get to know extraordinary people that also
live
here, get our children involved.
Это прекрасно, когда есть возможность узнать больше о том регионе, где ты живешь и работаешь, познакомиться ближе с уникальными людьми,
которые здесь
живут,
приобщить к этому наших детей.
The
place
where you live and keep your birds.
Finding a safe
place
to
live
or making the place you already
live
safer is one
of the most important things
you
can do to protect yourself and your children from domestic violence.
Найти безопасное место для жилья или чувствовать себя в безопасности там, где вы уже живете- это
самое важное, что
вы
должны сделать, чтобы защитить себя и своих детей от насилия в семье.
Finding a safe
place
to
live
or making the place you already
live
safer may be
among the most important steps
you
will take to protect yourself and your children from domestic violence.
Найти безопасное место для жилья или чувствовать себя в безопасности там, где вы уже живете- это
самое важное, что
вы
должны сделать, чтобы защитить себя и своих детей от насилия в семье.
A place where you can live, relax, mingle, dance, eat, sleep and laugh.
Место, где вы можете жить, знакомиться, расслабляться, танцевать, есть, пить и смеяться.
And only if there was some solution, some place where you could live. That’s not there.
А если бы было какое-то решение, какое-то местечко, где вы могли бы пожить… кроме как там.
Every time we need a new
place
to live, you get crazy. Lina.
Каждый раз, когда нам нужен новый дом, у тебя едет крыша.
That’s the only
place you
can live, you know.
And if
you
stay in your place,
you
may live in my kingdom.
Пока знаете свое место, можете жить в царствии моем.
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