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-   -   House Names (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=21512)

Trilby 11-28-2009 01:47 PM

House Names
 
I love the tradition of naming the family *cough* estate, as it 'twere.

My house was built in the fifties, three bedrooms and a bath and 1/2. NO WHOOP.

BUT I like pretending it's an English country cottage so I call it Hosa House as we've loads of hosta around (only thing that can really survive our absolutely horrid summers) - not that this has caught on, mind you, but it's fun to pretend. I have heard of one american house being called Loose Pilings - but I'm fairly certain a murder happened there and I can't compete with that.

what would you call your house if you have your druthers?

I've also thought of calling the place Brokedown Palace - but it's so far from a palace that it wouldn't even be ironic. :)

DanaC 11-28-2009 02:16 PM

There's a cottage down the road that I used to daydream about when i was living at Mum's and looking for my own place, after the split with J. It's lovely. And it is called Freedom.

Undertoad 11-28-2009 02:18 PM

Abandonall Hope

Juniper 11-28-2009 02:22 PM

The Money Pit. Oh, that's been done. :)

lumberjim 11-28-2009 02:51 PM

our house is named Phil

monster 11-28-2009 03:25 PM

The house where I grew up was called Kenmore.

Juniper 11-28-2009 03:27 PM

Actually, I have been toying with the idea of naming our place.

It's on a hill, with a kinda-sorta nice view of the valley below, sort of a rural-ish spot in the middle of suburbia. I dunno. Maybe y'all can help me out with some ideas. We've got a barn, a few chickens, a lovely aboveground pool, and a bunch of trees (mostly ash and locust). Well, here it is. I took a couple photos just for this thread.

http://www.wayswriter.com/pam/ourhouse_sm.jpg

http://www.wayswriter.com/pam/ourhouse2_sm.jpg

Undertoad 11-28-2009 03:54 PM

Juniplace

chrisinhouston 11-28-2009 04:39 PM

My great grandfather was the grandson of Robert Shaw of Terenure, which was an estate in Dublin. He is credited with founding the bank of Ireland among other things, and was one of those protestant family lines that were given a grant of land in Ireland for helping the King in some way. Anyway, my great grandfather's property in Foochow, China had a sign out front naming it Terenure. My grandparent did the same when they had a large home in Great Hallingbury in the UK and I have an uncle in Vancouver who has his small property named Terenure. I might do the same but my home owners association might not like it.

smoothmoniker 11-28-2009 04:48 PM

My in-laws sold their house in the Oakland hills and bought an old estate in northern Washington. 15 acres, evergreens, a stream, several ponds, vineyard, simply heavenly. The estate had a name when they bought it, Buitenzorg. It's Dutch for "A place beyond worries."

I've never seen a more aptly named place.

ZenGum 11-28-2009 05:48 PM

Arbeit macht frei.

zippyt 11-28-2009 06:06 PM

http://www.scrapbookpages.com/Poland...schwitz12.html

You Live in Such a cherry Place Zen

skysidhe 11-28-2009 09:03 PM

Smooth,Zen and Chris You all have home names like you'd find in a book.

I don't have a name for mine but it is almost like a little cabin in the woods.

jinx 11-28-2009 09:12 PM

Most of the beach houses down in obx have names. They're fun to read and you start to remember the same ones year after year... If we had one maybe we'd name it At The Helm's. Or Carl.

wolf 11-28-2009 09:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ZenGum (Post 613247)
Arbeit macht frei.

That's over the door to my office.

monster 11-28-2009 09:28 PM

juni take the first two or three letters out of each of your names and see what you can make out of that. e.g. Juniper + George + Kate + Peter = Ju Ge Ka Pe ....Kapejuge or Jewpackage or.... ok maybe not

ZenGum 11-28-2009 10:04 PM

Zippy and Wolf got it, but I don't think Skysidhe did.

Arbeit Macht Frei is German for "Work will make you free"; it was the sign over the gate of Auschwitz concentration/extermination camp to help trick the victims into behaving.
Maybe Sky reads some pretty grim books.

dar512 11-30-2009 02:14 PM

Well Jerry Pournelle, writer and columnist, wrote from Chaos Manor. I always liked that so our family newsletters occasionally come from Muddle House. And I once used Lesser Grumblings for something else.

SamIam 11-30-2009 02:29 PM

Place of unwashed dishes.

Trilby 11-30-2009 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SamIam (Post 613726)
Place of unwashed dishes.

PLUDI - place of unwashed dishes...

monster 11-30-2009 02:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SamIam (Post 613726)
Place of unwashed dishes.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brianna (Post 613727)
PLUDI - place of unwashed dishes...

Stinkysinky

Pie 11-30-2009 03:03 PM

Die Schierlinge

SteveDallas 11-30-2009 05:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brianna (Post 613207)
only thing that can really survive our absolutely horrid summers

We had a couple out-of-control hostas growing behind our house when we bought it. My experience was, you can't kill them if you try.

monster 11-30-2009 05:24 PM

Slugs'll do it.

ZenGum 11-30-2009 07:01 PM

The only hard thing is training them to sick.

monster 11-30-2009 07:43 PM

No, Slugs'll do it is the name of my house. :rolleyes:

ZenGum 11-30-2009 07:54 PM

Yeah, and "The only hard thing is training them to sick" is the name of my dog. Bite me.

monster 11-30-2009 08:29 PM

is not dog name thread. Bite yourself, ya lazy lump.

ZenGum 11-30-2009 08:48 PM

I would, but the hard thing is training myself to sick.

monster 11-30-2009 08:50 PM

19 minutes for that? You're sick alright.

Elspode 11-30-2009 09:02 PM

Our place is called Lunalushede Covenstead, as Lunalushede is the name of our coven, and this is where it, well, steads.

monster 11-30-2009 09:04 PM

I bet that's fun to tell cab drivers on your way home from a party.....

zippyt 11-30-2009 09:25 PM

Casa del Zip ??

skysidhe 11-30-2009 10:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SamIam (Post 613726)
Place of unwashed dishes.

That's great!

I love it so much I need to steal it and say place where sticky rollers meets flying cat fir.

*musing*
I don't know. I've got a sticky roller in one hand and a cat brush in the other seems. They take over my bed, they try to trip me in the hall. * sigh *

xoxoxoBruce 12-01-2009 01:29 AM

In rural New England, a house is generally know by the name of the previous owner.
So Jones buys a house from Smith, and lives there for 50 years... it's still the Smith place. When he sells the house, it becomes the Jones place. Sounds strange, but you know what, it works. :lol:

Juniper 12-01-2009 07:03 AM

OK, then I live in the Lykins place. Hm, something to think about.

Wouldn't it be more fitting to call it by the people who built it? There's a semi-romantic story around it; supposedly it was built by a hard-working Irish farmer by the name of Patrick (has a street nearby named after his brother) who couldn't read or write, but could build a house. And I gotta say, he sure built one heckuva house - nothing's plumb, but it's STRONG.

glatt 12-01-2009 07:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce (Post 613862)
In rural New England, a house is generally know by the name of the previous owner.

I never realized it before, but you are absolutely right.


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