hovel or shack
fort, house, or a shelter to live in =]
Possibly a cottage.
There is a Latin word 'hospitale' which means guest house, this was adopted into Old French as 'hostel' meaning a shelter for the needy. Later, this description became to mean an institution for 'sick people'. The Latin word passed into English about 1250/1300 as a place that received guests and later, as in France. a shelter for the needy and sick
It is French in origin it meas to shelter.
A house is a thing.
a tower, a house, a shelter...
shelter
shed
She described the lodge as a small warm shelter.
A structure of small size, similar to that of a dog-house, but offering useful shelter for a human.
fort, house, or a shelter to live in =]
Shelter House was created in 1741.
domik
My house is my shelter.
No, the other way around. The Morrison Shelter was a small sized one, so it could fit in the house and usually placed under dining table or underneath the stairs. The Anderson Shelter was outside and is family size.
The homophone for "small shelter" is "shoal shouter."
another word for egg shelter