estate
apartment buildings have peps livin in them dude or dudet. what up mickey compilla
In the U.K. we use ,'Estate', for a formal grouping. However, for informal groups of houses, there is hamlet, or village. Any other word is the U.K. such as, town, city, conurbation, indicates house and other buildings too!!!!
The word you need is 'alley' meaning a passage through a continuous row of houses to gain access from the street to the backyard.
A sentence using the word collection is.... <---
The base word of "collection" is "collect."
It should be: buildings'
No, the word buildings is not an adverb.The word buildings is a noun.
Depending on how it is used, build can be a noun or a verb. Noun: He has an athletic build. Verb: They build houses for a living.
Hardworking as a dog or beaver cuz animals word hard or hardworking as a builder cuz they work hard to build houses and buildings?
Yes, the compound word 'rock collection' is the noun in the sentence. The noun 'rock collection' is a word for a thing.
Buddhists come in many varieties and use many buildings. If you are looking for the Buddhist word for "temple" there is not one word that covers all types of buildings in which Buddhists gather. "Monastery" might be one of the more popular since the teaching is passed on monks. "Temples" are certainly out there. I know American Buddhists who meet in churches, meeting halls, Starbucks, colleges, and virtual worlds. In some parts of the world there are "stupas" which are buildings which house relics. But a word that is evolving to cover Western buildings is "sangha" which literally is the community (the people) who practice Buddhism but is coming, by extension, to mean the buildings in which they meet.
An architect is a person who designs buildings.