What Do You Call A Rrom That Is A Garden In Side A Home
House and garden vocabulary is one essential area of language learning. Everyone lives in some kind of home, whether it is a house, flat, apartment or other type of building or living quarters. So we need vocabulary to describe it!
In order to describe our home we need certain words to explain the layout of our house, flat, apartment or building, the rooms inside, the furniture they contain and any structural elements we want to comment on.
Describing a garden also means we need new words and phrases to comment on outside areas of a home. These include items gardening tools and equipment and other items you might find in a garden, patio, driveway or outdoor space.
House and Garden Vocabulary
There are many useful words related to house and home, such as upstairs and downstairs, various rooms of the house and furniture, along with structural elements, from walls and drainpipes to staircases.
Outside is equally rich in vocabulary with garden vocabulary including plants, patios, greenhouses, sheds and allotments.
Read on to explore more house and garden vocabulary.
Rooms in the house
Bedroom, Guest bedroom, Master bedroom, Spare bedroom
Kitchen, Kitchen/diner
Dining room (separate room intended for eating in, containing a dining table)
Living room, sitting room, lounge
Study
Hall, Hallway (space immediately on entering the front door, often long and narrow)
Landing (upstairs hallway, area at the top of the stairs or between two flights of stairs)
Bathroom, En suite bathroom (an 'en suite bathroom' is a bathroom leading directly off a bedroom)
Shower room
Toilet, WC, Lavatory
Utility room (room for 'white goods' – kitchen appliances – and sometimes performing dirty jobs, such as cleaning shoes)
Pantry (used to store food items)
Loft, attic (the highest room in the house, found in the roof space)
Cellar (an underground room, often used for storage)
Conservatory (extension to a house with glass roof and walls)
Structural features of a house
Door
Front door (usually the door to the street)
Back door (usually the door to the back of the house going out into the yard or garden)
Porch (covered area at the entrance to a house)
Chimney (a vertical channel that takes smoke from the fire up to the roof and out of the building)
Ceiling (the roof of an internal room)
Doorbell
Fireplace
Floor
Roof (outside, the top of the building)
Walls
Windows
Guttering, drainpipe (a narrow trough is used around the upper part of house to collect rain water from the roof and take it down to the drain)
Inside features of a house
Downstairs
Upstairs
Stairs, staircase
Bannister (hand rail by the staircase)
Radiator
Double glazing (two or three window panes added to the single pane to retain heat and protect against noise)
Letterbox (usually a hole in the door covered by a metal flap, used for deliveries of letters – 'post' in British English or 'mail' in American English)
Fireplace (place where the fire is situation, usually at the base of the chimney)
Companion set (items for cleaning a fireplace – poker, trowel and brush)
Mantelpiece / Fireplace mantel (decorative structure above a fireplace including a shelf, often used to place cards, ornaments and pictures. The mantel was traditionally used to protect the room from smoke from the fire)
Skirting board (a moulding fixed to the wall at the meeting point between wall and floor. This rails runs around the perimeter of the room, traditionally used to cover joining and protect the wall/wallpaper from kicks and furniture)
Dado rail (a moulding fixed to the wall around 24 inches up. This rails runs around the perimeter of the room and is also called a 'chair rail', traditionally used to protect the wall/wallpaper from furniture scraping against it)
Picture rail (a moulding fixed to the wall near the ceiling, going around the perimeter of the room, traditionally used to hang pictures from)
General Furniture
Chair
Table
Carpet, Rug
Curtains, Blinds
Light, Ceiling light
Table lamp, Floor lamp
Shelves, Bookshelf
Wallpaper
Living room furniture
Sofa, settee
Armchair, Easy chair
Mantel piece, Fire guard
Coffee table
Television stand
Side board – furniture usually positioned against a wall, used for storing items
Bedroom Furniture
Bed
Chest of drawers
Wardrobe
Bedside table
Bedside lamp
Study Furniture
Desk
Desk lamp
Monitor
Computer, mouse, laptop
Notice board
Calendar
Desk chair
Kitchen furniture and utensils
Kitchen table
Working surface
Dining table
Cutlery (fork, knife, spoon, other eating utensils)
Knife / knives
Fork
Spoon (table spoon, tea spoon, dessert spoon, serving spoon, wooden spoon)
Cheese grater
Whisk (manual/hand whisk or an electric whisk)
Rolling pin (wooden cylindrical item used for rolling out pastry)
Crockery (items made from porcelain, such as plates and cups)
Plate
Napkin – piece of cloth used to wipe the mouth or draped over the knee to protect clothes
Serviette – paper napkin
Glass, cup, tea cup, coffee cup, mug
Egg cup
Bowl, mixing bowl, serving bowl, soup bowl, cereal bowl
Pots and pans
Sauce pan
Wok
Gravy boat
Serving tray
Kitchen appliances
Cooker
Oven
Hob
Extractor fan (fan within a hood above the hob, used to remove steam, smells and smoke from cooking)
Food mixer
Blender
Juicer (used to squeeze the juice out of fruit and vegetables to make smoothies)
Slow cooker
Microwave
Deep fat fryer
Kettle (for boiling water)
Coffee machine
Fridge, Refrigerator
Freezer
Fridge Freezer (both appliances combined into one unit)
Utility Room Appliances
Washing machine (for washing clothes)
Tumble dryer (for drying clothes)
Dishwasher (for washing and drying pots, pans and cutlery)
Running a home
Central heating (controllable heating for the whole home using radiators)
Utility bill (a 'bill' is a request for payment – gas, electricity and water are 'utilities')
Gas bill
Electricity bill
Telephone bill
Water bill
Reading the electricity meter (checking how much electricity your home has used)
Housework
to do the housework
to make the beds
to cook the dinner
to lay the table (to put the cutlery and other items on the table in position ready for the meal)
to vacuum the carpets (sometimes called 'to hoover' or 'hoovering', which is to use the brand name Hoover – a famous brand of vacuum cleaner – as a verb)
to clean the windows
to dust, to mop, to wipe, to polish, to brush
to wash up (the pots)
the washing up (items that need to be washed)
to dry (the pots)
to do the ironing, to iron the clothes (usually using an ironing board)
The garden
Garden, Back garden, Front garden
Patio
Terrace
Rockery (heaped arrangement of rough stones with plants, often found in a front garden)
Drive (wide path leading up to the home, often used to park a car)
Dustbin (or trashcan – American) – where you put the rubbish
Fence
Flower bed, Flowerpot, Flowers
Hanging basket (for hanging flowers)
Clothes line (used to hang clothes out to dry)
Plants
Shrubs (low-growing plants, usually thick and bushy)
Weeds (undesirable, troublesome plants)
Greenhouse
Garage (place to put the car)
Garden furniture
Pond
Shed
Gate
Gravel (small stones, often used to cover the drive)
Hedge (fence/boundary made from shrubs)
Lawn (short grass used to cover the garden)
Path
Vegetable patch
Allotment (a plot of land, usually rented, used to grow vegetables or flowers)
to mow the lawn
to cut the hedge
to plant the flowers
to plant the bulbs (flowers grow from the bulbs)
to sew the seeds
Garden tools
Lawn mower (used for cutting the lawn – can be motorised or a manual hand mower)
Spade (a manual digging tool, rectangular front with a long handle)
Fork (a manual digging and raking tool, like a huge version of a kitchen fork)
Rake (raking tool for spreading soil evenly, like a long-handled brush with spikes instead of the brush fibres)
Hoe (tool for clearing soil, removing weeds and digging shallow trenches)
Shovel (for digging, similar to a spade but with a rounded front)
Hose or hosepipe (a long rubber pipe for directing water from the tap)
Watering can (vessel to fill with water for watering the plants and flowers)
Wheelbarrow (small cart with a wheel at the front and two handles, used for transporting items around the garden or building site)
Trowel (for digging small holes to plant flowers and bulbs)
Shears (large cutting tool for hedges)
Secateurs (small cutting tools for plants)
Share your thoughts
Can you think of any more useful house and garden vocabulary?
Do you find any of these words confusing?
Which are the most important phrases related to the home, housework or gardening?
What Do You Call A Rrom That Is A Garden In Side A Home
Source: https://www.myenglishlanguage.com/essential-vocabulary/house-and-garden/
Posted by: mclachlanlaze1999.blogspot.com
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