I am with Zara and call it a settee and it is in my living room; must be a British thing!
It's a couch
It's a sofa
It's called something else
This is a pointless poll, Elyse!
I am with Zara and call it a settee and it is in my living room; must be a British thing!
Lilith Cherry
"
"Love never claims, it ever gives. Love ever suffers, never resents, never revenges itself." -Mahatma Gandhi
I have said sofa before, but i usually say couch.
The idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that is wrong with the world. - Dr. Paul Farmer
Here in Germany, we have the same words for it, Sofa or Couch. You can say both.When I was younger, people prefered to call it a Sofa, but meanwhile, most people say Couch, I think...
In Denmark, we call it a sofa, too. It's funny how some words are different in Britain and USA. There are quite a few meaning exactly the same, However, Aksiel, a Chesterfield is something different and usually a lot more expensive.
A funny thing I noticed about houses, both in Britain and USA, are that they are described as "a 2-bedroom, 3-bedroom etc. flat/house. In Denmark you would never do that. It would be a 3-room flat or a 4-room flat etc. Which of the rooms you use as a bedroom is up to you. Of course, if a house has an upstairs, that's usually where the bedroom/s would be.
Also, the names you call different rooms... living, room, dining room, drawing room, lounge, family room, front room....
I noticed that some houses don't have a corridor in Britain/USA, that I find strange. A corridor here is where you come in from the outside, hang your coat and put your shoes.
Sirrahbed, my grandmother had a room with the nice furniture that was never used, except when very "speciel guests" came to visit. LOL!
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