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Cadzao Posted 20 years ago
Grammar

architectural slip cover

"Own your own home!" a slogan so familiar in the twenties as to be almost meaningless, sometimes meant a new house in an established suburb, sometimes a house in a "development" or a "subdivision." But in those days, unlike the mass-produced housed of almost identical shape and style that we have seen rising near all the big cities in the last seven years, a home-of-one's-own meant a house different from one's neighnor's. Often the difference was merely in an architectural slip cover that went over the plan."

Please explain the blue sentence to me.

Thank you.

Cadzao
  

Top answer

Just something different on the outside: ----- slip cover noun 1 a detachable cover for a chair or sofa. 2 a jacket or slip case for a book. view=uk ----

  • Just something different on the outside: ----- slip cover noun 1 a detachable cover for a chair or sofa.
  • 2 a jacket or slip case for a book.
  • view=uk ----
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4 Answers
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Just something different on the outside:

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slip cover

noun

1 a detachable cover for a chair or sofa. 2 a jacket or slip
case for a book.

http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/slipcover?view=uk
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Thank you very much, Marius Hancu.

Could you please explain a little bit more?

Cadzao
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A book isn't too much changed if you put a slip cover on it, isn't it?
It's just something superficial, on the surface.

Same with a house which would be painted differently from your neighbour's, but would have the same plan/design.
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Thank you again for the helpful explanation, Marius Hancu.

Cadzao

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