wartime house
English
Noun
wartime house (plural wartime houses)
- (Canada) Any of a large number of modest, wooden frame houses, typically of Cape-Cod design, built in municipalities across Canada during the 1940s under the federal government's Wartime Housing Limited program.
- 2001, John Larsen, Maurice Richard Libby, Moose Jaw: People, Places, History, →ISBN, page 150:
- On average, a four-room wartime house cost $2,700, and a six-room $3,400. The homes were a hot commodity.
- 2005, Gregory A. Scofield, Singing Home the Bones, →ISBN, page 109:
- The house that inspired this prayer is a small wartime house in a working-class neighbourhood in Edmonton, Alberta.
- 2008 December 20, Tracy Hanes, “Christmas comes early for Hamilton family”, in The Star, Toronto, Canada, retrieved 11 June 2014:
- Originally, a tiny wartime house sat on the corner lot facing on Dunsmure St.
- 2014 June 5, Alyssa McMurtry, “Out with the old, in with the new”, in The StarPhoenix, Saskatoon, Canada, retrieved 11 June 2014:
- If you were driving from Saskatoon to Vanscoy early this morning, you may have seen a wartime house from Spadina Crescent rolling down the highway.
Hypernyms
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