News1 min ago
flat, apartment, room
4 Answers
Flat, apartment - what's the difference? I have googled but that just adds to my confusion. Both are often defined as a suite of rooms - what word to use for a one room... thingy. If you use the word 'room', doesn't that sound as if it's furnished and comes with a stern landlady living in the same house, and like you yourself are Raskolnikov?
Some of the confusion (on my behalf) may perhaps have to do with differences between American English and British English?
I'm not logged on every day, so I'll say thanks in advance!
Some of the confusion (on my behalf) may perhaps have to do with differences between American English and British English?
I'm not logged on every day, so I'll say thanks in advance!
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by DaSwede. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks bednobs, studio flat or studio apartment does seem to be the right word for what I wish to describe. Bedsit sounds more depressing, I gather? Found this on Wikipedia:
Bedsits are often associated with poor people, and are referenced this way in Nights in White Satin by The Moody Blues: "bedsitter people look back and lament/on another day's useless energy spent".
Not that that description isn't spot on...
Bedsits are often associated with poor people, and are referenced this way in Nights in White Satin by The Moody Blues: "bedsitter people look back and lament/on another day's useless energy spent".
Not that that description isn't spot on...