What do you call the place (the building) where the students live together and have their own rooms. A college? A college dorm? The student’s hall?
Please help?!
What do you call the place (the building) where the students live together and have their own rooms. A college? A college dorm? The student’s hall?
Please help?!
Atheism is mother beautiful
I think it depends on the university. Where I did my undergraduate degree, they were 'Halls of Residence', or more often just 'Halls'. Where I am now, they're 'Colleges'.
"I should only believe in a God that would know how to dance. And when I saw my devil, I found him serious, thorough, profound, solemn: he was the spirit of gravity- through him all things fall. Not by wrath, but by laughter, do we slay. Come, let us slay the spirit of gravity!" - Nietzsche
In many colleges they were called as dormitory or dorm. Now it is called as Hall of Residence or Hall.
At my school the dormitory was the room where the boarders slept with rows of beds like a hospital ward.
The word dormitory comes from the word for sleep, which in Latin was dormire, in other words a bedroom.
The answer to the initial question would depend on the institution. In Oxford and Cambridge colleges those undergraduates not living out in lodgings would have their rooms in the college buildings and not originally separate quarters.
Previously JonathanB
The more I read, the more I shall covet to read. Robert Burton The Anatomy of Melancholy Partion3, Section 1, Member 1, Subsection 1
dorm/dormitory/hall of residence - use whatever you like..and you can also say 'live on campus' (though campus means 'an area of land containing all the main buildings of a university' not 'a place where students live')
Thanks Mary
Atheism is mother beautiful