Cottage facts for kids
A small house is often called a cottage. This word comes from England where it is used to mean a house that has one main storey, with a second, lower storey of bedrooms which fit under the roof upstairs. In many places the word cottage is used to mean a small old-fashioned house. In the United States the word cottage is often used to mean a small holiday home.
Cottages are usually found in villages or in the countryside, rather than in the town. They are nearly always built from material that can be found nearby. A cottage may be built of stone, of brick or of timber. It may have a roof of tiles, slates, shingles, shakes or thatch.
Images for kids
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South Savonia is one of the largest summer cottage regions in Finland, with more than 50,000 holiday homes. The picture was taken in Mäntyharju.
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19th century coal miners' cottages rebuilt at the Beamish Museum.
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The Ugly House (Welsh: Tŷ Hyll) near Betws-Y-Coed, a famous example of a tŷ unnos.
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A common sight in the west of Ireland – a 19th-century stone teachín – in Carrigmanus, County Cork
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Cottage built c. 1640, near Swedesboro, New Jersey
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Wolters Filling Station in Davenport, Iowa; an example of an English Cottage-style gas station
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A traditional 'langhuis' (long cottage) cottage in Verloren Vlei Heritage Village in the Western Cape region of South Africa
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Cottage with thatched roof, Simpson, Milton Keynes
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Cottage designed by John Nash at Blaise Hamlet, Bristol
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Cottage amongst sand dunes in Denmark
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The Hansel and Gretel cottage at the Efteling theme park, the Netherlands
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A wooden cottage in Međimurje County, Croatia
See also
In Spanish: Rancho (vivienda) para niños