[Vocabulary] A cloackroom?

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englishhobby

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Jun 19, 2009
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English Teacher
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Russian
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Russian Federation
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Russian Federation
Hello,
I can't find an English equivalent to the following Russian realities:

1) a room in a house or a flat where one keeps his/her clothes (and nothing else) - a dressing room is in the theatre, not in a flat, a wardrobe is just a piece of furniture, not a room, so how should I call it?

2) a kind of balcony which is very long and not sticking out of the facade of a building - we have another word for it, not a balcony, it's not a terrace either as it's not so big. The difference between it and a balcony lies in its size (it's bigger and longer as I said) and its being kind of "inside" the building, not sticking "outside". Or is there a word just for a "big balcony"?

Thanks beforehand.)
 
(Not a Teacher)

A cloakroom is a room where coats and hats are hung. In homes that have one, the front door usually opens up into the cloakroom.

1) The closet in which you keep your clothes can also be called a wardrobe.

2) Not sure if there is a specific term for it. Maybe just call it a recessed balcony. Can you stand on this balcony or is it decorative? Decorative balconies are called balconets.

You may have to link a picture.
 
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1. a walk-in wardrobe (the whole room is a wardrobe)
Or a dressing room. A dressing room can be attached to a bedroom.

2. A balcony is still called a balcony irrespective of size or shape, sticking out of the facade of a building or recessed.

not a teacher
 
5jj, I mean the first picture, only the "balcony" is twice or three times longer than it is in the first picture. Though the second picture is also like it - when you look at it from your apartment window (the only difference is that it's not on the ground, but on every floor of an apartment block).

Many thanks to all who contributed to this thread - I think now I got the words I need - 1) dressing room, cloakroom, walk- in wardrobe 2) (recessed) balcony
 
Good. And as a slightly relevant titbit to digest as you walk away from the thread, thanks for the typo in the title ;-) . "[STRIKE]Dressing[/STRIKE]* room', as you may know, is a euphemism for \WC. So the typo - which reminded me of the Latin for sewer (cloaca) - was strangely appropriate!

b

* PS Sorry likers. I meant 'cloakroom'
 
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That's interesting, BobK, thank you.))
 
Good. And as a slightly relevant titbit to digest as you walk away from the thread, thanks for the typo in the title ;-) . "Dressing room', as you may know, is a euphemism for \WC. So the typo - which reminded me of the Latin for sewer (cloaca) - was strangely appropriate!

b

I did not know that 'dressing room' is a euphemism for WC. :-o I know 'powder room' as a euphemism.
 
I did not know that 'dressing room' is a euphemism for WC. :-o I know 'powder room' as a euphemism.

:oops: I meant 'cloakroom' and have edited my previous post (which didn't make much sense, in the context of cloaca).

I suspect 'powder room' if used in the UK, is borrowed from Am Eng. and is not (yet) recognized as mainstream Br Eng.

Note re 'cloakroom': the desk/window/alcove.../<whatever> (where you leave coats/bags/hats/etc in a museum/gallery/theatre...) is also called a cloakroom. (It has no plumbing, and is not a euphemistic 'cloakroom'.)

b
 
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