play house
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See also: playhouse
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]play house (plural play houses)
- A dollhouse.
- Synonym: doll's house
- Hypernyms: toy, house
- A child's toy domestic dwelling, large enough for the child to enter.
- Synonyms: cubby house, toyhouse, Wendy house
- Alternative form of playhouse (“theater for performing plays”)
Translations
[edit]toy house for dolls — see doll's house
toy house for children to play in — see Wendy house
Verb
[edit]play house (third-person singular simple present plays house, present participle playing house, simple past and past participle played house)
- (children's games) To pretend to be a family in the household, acting out housekeeping and different family roles.
- They can keep all their things there and play house in their own way.
- To live as if married without actually being legally married; cohabit
- 1981, Emily Toth, Inside Peyton Place: the life of Grace Metalious, page 209:
- Though she flaunted her affair with TJ, Grace never admitted in print that she and George had “played house” before their marriage. Instead, she claimed they were married in 1942
- 2009, Fisher Ellie Slott, Mom There's a Man in the Kitchen and He's Wearing Your Robe:
- Playing House Instead / There are times you may find it more appropriate to live with someone rather than rush into marriage.
- 2010, Kim Stafford, Damage, page 122:
- I really don't like you playing house with the kids around. I don't want the kids to think that it's okay to live together without commitment.
Translations
[edit]to act out family roles
|
to live unmarried as if being married
|