houseling
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English houselyng, housling, from Old English hūslung (“administration of the sacrament”), from Old English hūslian (“to administer the sacrament”), equivalent to housel + -ing.
Adjective
houseling (not comparable)
- Of or pertaining to the eucharist.
- Pertaining to any of the sacraments of the Roman Catholic Church, such as marriage.
Derived terms
- houseling people
Noun
houseling (plural houselings)
- A small or miniature house.
- 2011, John Knauf, The Ropewalk:
- There was a copula up there, one of those small, windowed houselings whose pointed roof inevitably supported the weathervane, as it did here.
- One who frequently remains indoors or at home.
- 1889, The Homiletic review, volume 17, page 188:
- It meant that pallid houselings sat in the sunshine and got well.
- A tame animal, or one reared by hand.
Synonyms
- (small house): houselet
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