Hut vs Villa - What's the difference?
hut | villa |
(rare, archaic, transitive) to put into a hut
(rare, archaic, intransitive) to take shelter in a hut
* Washington Irving
A house, often larger and more expensive than average, in the countryside or on the coast, often used as a retreat.
* {{quote-book, year=1922, author=, title=“Piracy”: A Romantic Chronicle of These Days, chapter=3/6/1
, passage=This villa' was long and low and white, and severe after its manner?: for upon and about it were none of those playful ebullitions of taste, such as conical towers, domed roofs, embattlements, statues, coloured tiles and crenellations, such as are dear to architects of ' villas all the world over.}}
(UK) A family house, often semi-detached, in a middle class street.
(Ancient Rome) a country house, with farm buildings around a courtyard.
As a noun hut
is hat or hut can be guard.As a proper noun villa is
(soccer) , a football club based in birmingham.hut
English
Verb
(hutt)- to hut troops in winter quarters
- The troops hutted among the heights of Morristown.
Anagrams
* * ----villa
English
(wikipedia villa)Noun
(en noun)citation