different between housen vs hausen
housen
English
Etymology
From Middle English housen, husen.
Noun
housen
- (now chiefly dialectal) plural of house
- 1775, Simeon Lyman of Sharon, journal, Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society, Volume 7, page 117:
- In the forenoon it rained, and in the afternoon I looked round the housen to see the damage they did the town.
- 1874, "Eight per Cent", The Headington Magazine, volume 6, page 7:
- 'If the housen weren't good housen I'd have nothing to say to them,' said Ingram
- 1880, James Spilling, Molly Miggs's trip to the seaside, page 14:
- I weant on for a gudish way till at last I loast sight o' the great square building behind the housen.
- 1917, Edward Harry William Meyerstein, Wilfrid Blair, Black and White Magic - Page 60:
- Hide you in your housen! Hang above your Portals The shielding quicken bough!
- 1929, Mary Webb, Precious Bane:
- “Ho, rooks!” shouted Gideon. “Father's dead, and I be maister, and I've come to say as you shall keep your housen in peace, and I'll keep ye safe from all but my own gun, and you're kindly welcome to bide."
- 1775, Simeon Lyman of Sharon, journal, Collections of the Connecticut Historical Society, Volume 7, page 117:
Anagrams
- unshoe
Middle English
Etymology 1
From Old English h?sian, from Proto-Germanic *h?s?n?; equivalent to hous +? -en (“infinitival ending”).
Alternative forms
- howsen, howsyn, huse
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?hu?z?n/
Verb
housen
- To shelter, give accomodation
- To look for shelter
- To house, store
- To build, construct (especially referring to houses)
Conjugation
Descendants
- English: (to) house
References
- “h?usen, v.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 2018-04-06.
Etymology 2
From hous +? -en (“plural ending”).
Alternative forms
- husen, howsen
Noun
housen
- plural of hous
Swedish
Noun
housen
- definite singular of house
housen From the web:
hausen
English
Noun
hausen (plural hausens)
- The beluga (Huso huso)
German
Etymology
From Middle High German h?sen, from Old High German h?s?n, from Proto-Germanic *h?s?n?. Cognate with German Low German husen, Dutch huizen, English house, Faroese húsa.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [?ha??zn?], [?ha??z?n]
- Hyphenation: hau?sen
Verb
hausen (weak, third-person singular present haust, past tense hauste, past participle gehaust, auxiliary haben)
- (colloquial, humorous or derogatory) to dwell, to reside
- (colloquial, derogatory) to rage, to rampage
Conjugation
Synonyms
- (neutral) wohnen, leben
Further reading
- “hausen” in Duden online
hausen From the web:
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