gighouse
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]gighouse (plural gighouses)
- A building for keeping a gig (horse-drawn carriage) when not in use; carriage house.
- 1911, The American and English Annotated Cases, page 1287:
- In Reg. v. Coots, 2 Cox C. C. (Eng) 188, two boys were found concealed in a corn bin in an open gighouse, half a mile from the house in which the burglary was committed.
- 2013, John Steane, James Ayres, Traditional Buildings in the Oxford Region, page 298:
- The most significant exception to this is the gighouse added to the west end of the building.
- 2017, Fiona Farrell, Decline and Fall on Savage Street, →ISBN, page 24:
- And their stout ship, rigged for Antacrctic waters, was a raft constructed from weatherboard offcuts the builders had left stacked behind the stable and gighouse, now lashed to half a dozen firmly sealed kerosene tins.