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Hovel   /hˈəvəl/   Listen
noun
Hovel  n.  
1.
An open shed for sheltering cattle, or protecting produce, etc., from the weather.
2.
A poor cottage; a small, mean house; a hut.
3.
(Porcelain Manuf.) A large conical brick structure around which the firing kilns are grouped.



verb
Hovel  v. t.  (past & past part. hoveled or hovelled; pres. part. hoveling or hovelling)  To put in a hovel; to shelter. "To hovel thee with swine, and rogues forlon." "The poor are hoveled and hustled together."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Hovel" Quotes from Famous Books



... accordance with his children's wishes, Mr Maurice accompanied Harry to the residence of the poor woman they had seen at Mr T.'s shop. It was a miserable hovel, but after all there was an air of cleanliness and comfort about it, that the most abject poverty can seldom of itself destroy. A white curtain, mended it is true, in very many places, yet looking quite respectable, still shaded the only window of the apartment. ...
— Effie Maurice - Or What do I Love Best • Fanny Forester

... is the struggle which the middle classes in England are maintaining against an aristocracy of mere locality, against an aristocracy, the principle of which is to invest a hundred drunken pot-wallopers in one place, or the owner of a ruined hovel in another, with powers which are withheld from cities renowned to the furthest ends of the earth for the marvels of their ...
— English: Composition and Literature • W. F. (William Franklin) Webster

... lived in a tiny hovel on the edge of the city, and when the glittering procession drew near it the small patch of garden was quite bare and had not a Blue Flower in it. And the little cripple was sitting huddled upon his broken door-step, sobbing softly with his face hidden ...
— The Land of the Blue Flower • Frances Hodgson Burnett

... he was impassible before victory, before danger, before defeat. Before the greatest obstacle or the most trivial ceremony; before a hundred thousand men drawn in battalia, or a peasant slaughtered at the door of his burning hovel; before a carouse of drunken German lords, or a monarch's court, or a cottage-table, where his plans were laid, or an enemy's battery, vomiting flame and death, and strewing corpses round about him;—he was always cold, calm, resolute, like fate. ...
— Henry Esmond; The English Humourists; The Four Georges • William Makepeace Thackeray

... each class being found in clusters about its special locality, but all going to make up the aggregate figure of the population. That the numbers should reach the round total of a million of people was a surprise. In the European cities we see the palace and the hovel, wealth and poverty, everywhere jostling each other. In Florence, Rome, or Naples a half-starved cobbler's stall may nestle beneath a palace, or a vendor of roast chestnuts may have established himself there. In Bombay a sense of propriety and ...
— Due West - or Round the World in Ten Months • Maturin Murray Ballou


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