Terrace vs Lanai - What's the difference?
terrace | lanai |
A platform that extends outwards from a building.
*
A raised, flat-topped bank of earth with sloping sides, especially one of a series for farming or leisure; a similar natural area of ground, often next to a river.
A row of residential houses with no gaps between them; a group of row houses.
(in the plural, chiefly, British) The standing area at a football ground.
(chiefly, Indian English) The roof of a building, especially if accessible to the residents. Often used for drying laundry, sun-drying foodstuffs, exercise, or sleeping outdoors in hot weather.
To provide something with a terrace.
To form something into a terrace.
A Hawaiian-style roofed patio.
*1953 , (Raymond Chandler), The Long Goodbye , Penguin 2010, p. 22:
*:‘If they vomit in the lanai , that's for the butler to handle.’
* {{quote-news, 2007, March 11, Tracie Rozhon, To Have, Hold and Cherish, Until Bedtime, New York Times
, passage=In Honolulu, Nancy Peacock, an architect, said her clients increasingly requested “punees,” as daybeds are known in Hawaii — sometimes on the lanai , the covered porch of the house. }}
As nouns the difference between terrace and lanai
is that terrace is a platform that extends outwards from a building while lanai is a Hawaiian-style roofed patio.As proper nouns the difference between terrace and lanai
is that terrace is a city in British Columbia, Canada while Lanai is the sixth largest island of Hawaii.As a verb terrace
is to provide something with a terrace.terrace
English
(wikipedia terrace) {, style="float: right; clear:right;" , , , }Noun
(en noun)- They stayed together during three dances, went out on to the terrace , explored wherever they were permitted to explore, paid two visits to the buffet, and enjoyed themselves much in the same way as if they had been school-children surreptitiously breaking loose from an assembly of grown-ups.
See also
* (l)Verb
(terrac)Anagrams
*lanai
English
Noun
(en noun)citation
