| 释义 | hous·ing I. \ˈhau̇ziŋ, -zēŋ\ noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English; partly from hous, n., house + -ing: partly from gerund of housen to house — more at house
 1.  : shelter, lodging
 2.
 a.  : the act of placing under shelter
 b.  : the act of living in a house
 3.  : dwellings provided for numbers of people or for a community
 < housing for the aged >
 4.
 a.  : something that covers or protects (as of boards over a ship's deck)
 b.  : a case or enclosure especially for a machine or part, an instrument, a lamp
 < the differential housing on an automobile >
 c.  : a tube or cylindrical sleeve or casing (as an enclosed bearing) in which a shaft revolves
 5.  : a portion of a mast that is beneath the deck or of a bowsprit that is inboard
 6.
 a.  : the space taken out of a structural member (as a timber) to admit the insertion of part of another — compare mortise
 b.  : a hollowed space (as a niche) for holding a piece of sculpture
 7. [perhaps from Dutch huizing (from huis house + -ing) or Low German hüsing, from hus house + -ing)]  : houseline
 II. noun
 (-s)
 Etymology: Middle English, from house housing + -ing — more at house
 1.  : an ornamental cover for a horse's saddle
 2. housings plural  : trappings, ornamentation
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