Penthouse vs Attic - What's the difference?
penthouse | attic |
An outhouse or other structure (especially one with a sloping roof) attached to the outside wall of a building.
* 1826 : William Eusebius Andrews, Review of Fox's Book of Martyrs , WE Andrews, pp. 386-7:
An apartment or suite found on an upper floor, or floors, of a tall building, especially one that is expensive or luxurious with panoramic views. Sometimes these are located just under "Penthouse Mechanical" floors.
* 1995 : Mary Ellen Waithe, Contemporary Women Philosophers: 1900-Today , Springer, p. 214:
Any of the sloping roofs at the side of a real tennis court.
* 2005, Tony Collins (ed.), Encyclopaedia of Traditional British Rural Sports , Routledge, page 262,
As nouns the difference between penthouse and attic
is that penthouse is an outhouse or other structure (especially one with a sloping roof) attached to the outside wall of a building while attic is the space, often unfinished and with sloped walls, directly below the roof in the uppermost part of a house or other building, generally used for storage or habitation.As an adjective Attic is
relating to Athenian culture or architecture.As a proper noun Attic is
an ancient Greek dialect spoken in Attica, Euboea, and the northern coastal regions of the Aegean Sea.penthouse
English
Noun
(en noun)- At length, recommending himself to God, he let go one end of his cord, and suffered himself to fall down upon an old shed or penthouse , which, with the weight of his body, fell in with great noise.
- Night of January 16th is the story of a woman on trial for pushing her wealthy boss-lover from a Manhattan penthouse .
- An odd derivative of real tennis lasted until the latter part of the eighteenth century at Rattray in Perthshire. It was played in the churchyard by two pairs of men, and the method for starting the play was to throw the ball onto the church roof, using it like the sloping penthouse of the tennis court.