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Household Very Common

Household has 3 different meanings across 1 category:

Noun

Definitions
Noun
1

a social unit living together

"he moved his family to Virginia"

"It was a good Christian household"

"I waited until the whole house was asleep"

"the teacher asked how many people made up his home"

"the family refused to accept his will"

2

Collectively, all the persons who live in a given house; a family including attendants, servants etc.; a domestic or family establishment.

"After the renovation, our household now includes three children and two new nannies to help manage the busy schedule."

In plain English: A household is a group of people who live together in the same home and share daily life.

"The household consists of four people living together in that house."

Usage: Use household to refer to the group of people living together in a single home, such as when discussing how many households are affected by a policy. Do not use it to describe the physical building itself, which should be called a house or home.

Adjective
1

Belonging to the same house and family.

"The household was surprised when the new neighbor started borrowing their tools without asking."

In plain English: The adjective form of household is not commonly used, so it likely refers to something related to a family home rather than being a standalone word with its own specific meaning.

"He bought a few household items to clean his kitchen."

Usage: Use household as an adjective to describe items, activities, or people that belong to and are shared by members of a single home. For example, say "household chores" to refer to tasks done for the benefit of everyone living in the house.

Example Sentences
"He bought a few household items to clean his kitchen." adj
"The household consists of four people living together in that house." noun
"He cleaned every corner of his household before guests arrived." noun
"The new government program aims to support low-income households across the nation." noun
"Most people spend more time in their household than anywhere else they go." noun
Related Terms
servant dog lares and penates durable good hundred closet domestical ewery groaning cheese breadwinner hypochlorite greencloth house tinker hukou ugly stick harem oikos dvornik multidwelling
Broader Terms (hypernyms)
unit
Narrower Terms (hyponyms)
broken home nuclear family extended family foster family foster home menage a trois

Origin

The word household comes from Middle English and was formed by combining the words for "house" and "hold." It originally referred to a group of people living together in one house.

Rhyming Words
old mold dold yold sold bold gold wold fold told rold cold 2 old efold woold ahold scold 3 old acold 4 old
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