For rabbits, "cage à lapins" (rabbits cage).
starsky and hutch
Both are equally proper. The alliteration of "The hens are in the hutch" is very nice.
Hutch is defined as1a a chest or compartment for storage (1b) a cupboard with open shelvesa pen or coop for an animalshack, shantyMerriam-Webster and other online sources say the word hutch comes from "Middle English: from Old French huche, from medieval Latin hutica, of unknown origin. The original sense was ‘storage chest’." "1275-1325; Middle English hucche, variant of whucce, Old English hwicce chest." And Middle English huche, from Anglo-French. On the bottom of the Merriam-Webster page is a picture of a cupboard hutch.Apparently, use of the phrase "rabbit hutch" evolved later than the hutch as a cupboard or chest.
because it is a hutch
well i am assuming that hutch roughly means enclosed so an antonym for hutch is open.
Hutch Dano is American.
Johnny Hutch is 5'.
I would say its Hutch vs Darryl. Hutch dislikes Darryl because he took Hutch's position at shortstop, and Darryl dislikes Hutch at some parts because Hutch has most of the fame, which is what Darryl wants
A "rabbit hutch" or simply "a hutch" is a home for rabbits. Examples: We built a rabbit hutch from old lumber and mesh wire. The rabbits settled into their hutch. The door of the hutch came unlatched and the rabbits escaped.
Hutch is a word in the English vocabulary, yes.
Hutch Award was created in 1965.
Gerry Hutch was born in 1963.