at home - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Prepositional phrase
[edit]
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see at, home. In one's place of residence.
Sorry sir, I left my homework at home.
"Where's David?" "He stayed at home to fix the washing machine."- 2013 June 3, Brad Harrington, “Behind the Data on Breadwinner Mothers”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 16 October 2023:
The number of at-home dads has also doubled in the last decade.
- 2013 June 3, Brad Harrington, “Behind the Data on Breadwinner Mothers”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 16 October 2023:
- (idiomatic) At ease; comfortable.
I feel at home around my girlfriend's family.
I'm right at home in my new university.
He's quite at home discussing French literature.- 1923, Ernest Bramah, The Eyes of Max Carrados:
"You see, I always feel at home in the dark," apologised the blind man.
- 1923, Ernest Bramah, The Eyes of Max Carrados:
- In the home of one's parents.
I can't believe it: she's 28 and still lives at home. - In a private residence as opposed to a nursing home.
He is really elderly and can still live at home. - (sports, of a team) Playing at its usual venue, playing as the home team.
The team has won three-quarters of its games at home, but less than half of away games.
Antonyms: away, away from home, on the road
The team has a 6–2 record at home.- 2024 April 17, “Rural railways: do they deliver?”, in RAIL, number 1007, page 58:
Today is match day, Grimsby Town are at home, and the ground is walking distance from New Clee station. So, visiting football supporters coming by train have to change at Grimsby Town [station]. That's a real pain.
- 2024 April 17, “Rural railways: do they deliver?”, in RAIL, number 1007, page 58:
- (dated) Available or willing to receive visitors.
- 1922 Emily Post, Etiquette, Chapter 10: Cards and Visits
When a servant at a door says “Not at home,” this phrase means that the lady of the house is “Not at home to visitors.” This answer neither signifies nor implies—nor is it intended to—that Mrs. Jones is out of the house.
- 1922 Emily Post, Etiquette, Chapter 10: Cards and Visits
in one's place of residence
- Armenian: տանը (tanə)
- Belarusian: до́ма (dóma)
- Bulgarian: вкъ́щи (bg) (vkǎ́šti), у дома́ (u domá)
- Catalan: a casa
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 在家里 (zài jiālǐ) - Comorian:
Maore Comorian: ɗagoni - Czech: doma (cs)
- Danish: hjemme (da)
- Dutch: thuis (nl)
- Esperanto: hejme (eo)
- Estonian: kodus
- Faroese: heima (fo)
- Finnish: kotona (fi)
- French: chez soi (fr), à la maison (fr)
- German: zu Hause (de), zuhause (de), daheim (de)
- Greek: στο σπίτι (sto spíti)
Ancient Greek: οἴκοι (oíkoi) - Hindi: घर पर (ghar par)
- Hungarian: itthon (hu), otthon (hu)
- Icelandic: heima (is), heima við, að heiman (not at home), fjarverandi m (not at home), fjarstaddur m (not at home)
- Ido: heme (io)
- Irish: sa bhaile
- Italian: a casa
- Japanese: 家に (ja) (うちに, uchi ni)
- Jeju: 집이 (jib-i)
- Korean: 집 (ko) (jip), 집에 (jibe)
- Lao: ທີ່ບ້ານ (thī bān)
- Latin: domī (la), in domō, intrā paternōs parietēs, intrā domesticōs parietēs
- Lithuanian: namiẽ
- Macedonian: дома (doma)
- Malay: di rumah
- Norwegian: drive (no)
Bokmål: hjemme (no), heime (no)
Nynorsk: heime (nn) - Pannonian Rusyn: дома (doma)
- Pennsylvania German: deheem
- Persian: منزل (fa) (manzel), در منزل (dar manzel)
- Polish: w domu
- Portuguese: em casa
- Romani: khere
- Romanian: acasă (ro)
- Romansh: a chasa (Rumantsch Grischun, Vallader), a casa (Sursilvan), a tgea, a tgeasa (Sutsilvan), a tgesa (Surmiran), a chesa (Puter)
- Russian: до́ма (ru) (dóma)
- Sami:
Skolt Sami: dååma - Scots: home-aboot (Orkney), hame
- Scottish Gaelic: aig an taigh
- Serbo-Croatian: kod kuće
- Slovak: doma (sk)
- Slovene: doma (sl)
- Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: doma - Spanish: en casa
- Swedish: hemma (sv), hemmavid (sv)
- Turkish: evde (tr)
- Ukrainian: вдо́ма (uk) (vdóma), удо́ма (udóma)
- Urdu: گھر پر (ghar par)
- Walloon: e s' måjhon (wa), e s' måjhone (wa)
- Welsh: gartref, gartre, acw (North Wales)
- Yiddish: אין דער היים (in der heym)
- Yoruba: nílé, ńlé
in the home of one's parents
- (historical) A type of reception or party whereby the host says that they will be ‘at home’ during specific hours, when guests can come and go as they like.
- 1924, Ford Madox Ford, Some Do Not... (Parade's End), Penguin, published 2012, page 4:
And, as near as possible to the dear ladies who gave the At Homes, Macmaster could keep up the talk – a little magisterially. - 1985, Peter Carey, Illywhacker, Faber and Faber, published 2003, page 104:
She had gone, with high hemlines, to ‘At Homes’ and balls, and left me jealous, half mad, to cluck with her parents who were concerned she might be mixing with a fast crowd.
- 1924, Ford Madox Ford, Some Do Not... (Parade's End), Penguin, published 2012, page 4:
- “at home”, in Merriam-Webster.com Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
- “at home in”, in Merriam-Webster.com Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
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