hut
IPA: hˈʌt
noun
- A small, simple one-storey dwelling or shelter, often with just one room, and generally built of readily available local materials.
- A small wooden shed.
- (agriculture, obsolete) A small stack of grain.
verb
- (archaic, transitive) To provide (someone) with shelter in a hut.
- (archaic, intransitive) To take shelter in a hut.
- (agriculture, obsolete, transitive) To stack (sheaves of grain).
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Examples of "hut" in Sentences
- Now at my age and disabilities i must hut from a stand,.
- The actual hut is a complete wreck and is only meant for porters, but it is a good campsite with a toilet and stream nearby.
- From Morskie Oko (there is a nice but overcrowded mountain hut over there) you can go higher (red trail all the time) to Czarny Staw lake.
- Mr. Glenthorpe seemed very pleased with his interest, and told him about a valuable discovery made in a field near what he called the hut circles.
- The shape of the hut is also energy - and resource-efficient, all cozy details that make it a prime location for late-night sleeping-bag storytelling.
- The hut is 3 meters by 3 meters (10 by 10 feet) in size, the walls are made of concrete, the roof is corrugated sheet metal, and the sparse furnishings include a bed and an oil lamp.
- On the floor of the hut is a heap of fine twisting tree-roots which she brought from the forest yesterday; and under the shadow of her grassy roof she sits before the door weaving them into strong, neat baskets, like the one in which the men carried their dinner when they went to hunt.
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