penthouse

[pent-hous] /ˈpɛntˌhaʊs/
noun, plural penthouses
[pent-hou-ziz] /ˈpɛntˌhaʊ zɪz/ (Show IPA)
1.
an apartment or dwelling on the roof of a building, usually set back from the outer walls.
2.
any specially designed apartment on an upper floor, especially the top floor, of a building.
3.
a structure on a roof for housing elevator machinery, a water tank, etc.
4.
Also called pent, pentice
[pen-tis] /ˈpɛn tɪs/ (Show IPA)
. a shed with a sloping roof, or a sloping roof, projecting from a wall or the side of a building, as to shelter a door.
5.
any rooflike shelter or overhanging part.
6.
7.
Court Tennis. a corridor having a slanted roof and projecting from three walls of the court.
Origin
1520-30; alteration (by folk etymology) of Middle English pentis < Old French apentiz, equivalent to apent past participle of apendre to hang against (see appendant) + -iz (French -is) < Vulgar Latin *-ātīcium, noun use of neuter of *-ātīcius, equivalent to Latin -āt(us) -ate1 + -īcius adj. suffix
Related forms
penthouselike, adjective
Examples from the web for penthouse
  • The cultural setting from laws to latrines, from penthouse to poorhouse, traveled by jet or on foot.
  • In the second act the curtain rises to reveal an oligarch's penthouse.
  • The result was a buildup of hydrogen under the metal clad roof of the penthouse above the reactor's concrete containment box.
  • The dumbwaiter will be removed, and a penthouse floor with a roof deck will be added.
  • The finished product was so alluring that he decided to move into the penthouse and to add a pavilion on the roof.
  • Up in the penthouse a bagpiper serenaded the last visitors as they took the elevators down after midnight.
  • Accommodation choices include spacious studio, penthouse and two-bedroom suites.
  • Choose from oceanfront rooms, a penthouse suite or rooms adjoined to a suite.
  • The boutique-style hotel offers a choice of one-bedroom, two-bedroom and penthouse suites.
  • Accommodations include the standard room, one-bedroom suite and penthouse suite.
British Dictionary definitions for penthouse

penthouse

/ˈpɛntˌhaʊs/
noun
1.
a flat or maisonette built onto the top floor or roof of a block of flats
2.
a construction on the roof of a building, esp one used to house machinery
3.
a shed built against a building, esp one that has a sloping roof
4.
(real tennis) the roofed corridor that runs along three sides of the court
Word Origin
C14 pentis (later penthouse, by folk etymology), from Old French apentis, from Late Latin appendicium appendage, from Latin appendere to hang from; see appendix
Word Origin and History for penthouse
n.

pendize, early 14c., from Anglo-French pentiz, a shortening of Old French apentis "attached building, appendage," from Medieval Latin appendicium, from Latin appendere "to hang" (see append). Modern spelling is from c.1530, by folk etymology influence of Middle French pente "slope," and English house (the meaning at that time was "attached building with a sloping roof or awning"). Originally a simple structure (Middle English homilies describe Jesus' birthplace in the manger as a "penthouse"); meaning "apartment or small house built on the roof of a skyscraper" first recorded 1921, from which time dates its association with luxury.