Can the phrase semi detached house mean that a house is attached to other houses from both sides? Our English teacher told us that this is true, however on Wikipedia or on the Cambridge dictionary it is described as attached to a different house on only one side. Thanks for help.
1 Answer
In Britain, a semi-detached house always means one of a pair, usually with left/right symmetry, and not attached to others. Houses joined in a row are, oddly, called ‘terraced’.
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1..and the houses that are at the ends of a terrace are described as "end of terrace" rather than being "semi-detached" (despite the fact that they are only attached on one side). Commented Oct 16, 2019 at 10:01
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In recent years there has been a design called Q type where four properties are arranged in a square block with one on each corner, so each property has two neighbours. Commented Oct 16, 2019 at 10:15
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yeah a detached house has no neighbours attached, a semi detached could be called a semi-terrace as well, wonder why they chose semi-detached :)– WendyGCommented Oct 16, 2019 at 13:03