˜yÐÄvlog

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villadom

[ vil-uh-duhm ]

noun

British.
  1. villas collectively.
  2. suburban life and society; suburbia.


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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of villadom1

First recorded in 1875–80; villa + -dom
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

In suburban villadom, pictured in Table III., the clerk is often father to the clerk, while the son of a shopkeeper occasionally assists his parents in the shop.

From

Table II. includes the electoral areas of Dulwich and Lewisham; it may be regarded as typical of suburban villadom so far as its inhabitants send their children to the elementary schools.

From

There is no telling at such a time what may be the depths of the Punch Bowl; and as for the houses that stand upon the topmost ridge of Hindhead, why, they wear all the appearance of romantic castles, in which not nineteenth-century villadom dwells, but where dare-devil barons of Rhine-legend, or of the still more terrible Mrs. Radclyffe type, exercise untrammelled their native ferocity, even unto the colophon of the third volume.

From

The private gardens of urban or suburban villadom were soon too small for the wielders of the racquet.

From

Yonder mass of foliage that bounds the garden, with its winding intervals of turf and look of expansiveness, it serves to conceal villadom and the hulking paper-factory beyond; that rock-garden with its developed geological formation, dotted over with choice Alpine plants, that the stranger comes to see.

From

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