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Home   /hoʊm/   Listen
Home

noun
1.
Where you live at a particular time.  Synonym: place.  "He doesn't have a home to go to" , "Your place or mine?"
2.
Housing that someone is living in.  Synonyms: abode, domicile, dwelling, dwelling house, habitation.  "They raise money to provide homes for the homeless"
3.
The country or state or city where you live.  "His home is New Jersey"
4.
(baseball) base consisting of a rubber slab where the batter stands; it must be touched by a base runner in order to score.  Synonyms: home base, home plate, plate.
5.
The place where you are stationed and from which missions start and end.  Synonym: base.
6.
Place where something began and flourished.
7.
An environment offering affection and security.  "He grew up in a good Christian home" , "There's no place like home"
8.
A social unit living together.  Synonyms: family, house, household, menage.  "It was a good Christian household" , "I waited until the whole house was asleep" , "The teacher asked how many people made up his home"
9.
An institution where people are cared for.  Synonyms: nursing home, rest home.
adverb
1.
At or to or in the direction of one's home or family.  "After the game the children brought friends home for supper" , "I'll be home tomorrow" , "Came riding home in style" , "I hope you will come home for Christmas" , "I'll take her home" , "Don't forget to write home"
2.
On or to the point aimed at.
3.
To the fullest extent; to the heart.  "Drove his point home" , "His comments hit home"
verb
1.
Provide with, or send to, a home.
2.
Return home accurately from a long distance.
adjective
1.
Used of your own ground.
2.
Relating to or being where one lives or where one's roots are.
3.
Inside the country.  Synonyms: interior, internal, national.  "The nation's internal politics"



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"Home" Quotes from Famous Books



... had been carried and the harvest supper was over, he came home late, and wearied out. His working life at Clinton Magna was done; and the family he had worked for so long was broken up in distress and poverty. Yet he felt only a secret exultation. Such toil and effort behind—such a dreamland ...
— Bessie Costrell • Mrs. Humphry Ward

... as the natives told us that the rains always ceased about that time! I had brought with me from Gaffat an Amharic grammar. "Faute de mieux," I struggled hard to study it, but the mind was not fitted for such work; and, book in hand, I was in spirit, thousands of miles away, thinking of home, dreaming awake of beloved friends, of freedom and liberty. Towards the end of August, shortly after the return of our ill-fated messenger, we wrote again and sent another man: by this time we had ...
— A Narrative of Captivity in Abyssinia - With Some Account of the Late Emperor Theodore, - His Country and People • Henry Blanc

... loved him with exceeding love and ever and anon would send him somewhat of dirhams and this continued until both of them attained their fourteenth years. Then the youth was minded to marry the daughter of his uncle, so he sent a party of friends to her home by way of urging his claim that the father might wed her to him, but the man them and they returned disappointed. However, when it was the second day a body of warm men and wealthy came to ask for the maid in marriage, and they conditioned the needful conditions ...
— Supplemental Nights, Volume 5 • Richard F. Burton

... solemn of all mysteries. In 1833 he had an awful shock in the sudden death of his friend Arthur Hallam, "an overwhelming sorrow which blotted out all joy from his life and made him long for death". He had other minor troubles which contributed greatly to depress him,—the breaking up of the old home at Somersby, his own poverty and uncertain prospects, his being compelled in consequence to break off all intercourse with Miss Emily Selwood. It is possible that 'Love and Duty' may have reference to this sorrow; it is certain that 'The Two ...
— The Early Poems of Alfred Lord Tennyson • Tennyson

... furnishings, only dust-piles, splinters and punky rubbish remained. Through the rotted plank shutters, that hung drunkenly awry from rust-eaten hinges, long spears of sunlight wanly illuminated the wreck of all that had once been the lavish home of a billionaire. ...
— Darkness and Dawn • George Allan England


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