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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a tree house" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to refer to a structure built in the branches of a tree, typically for children to play in or as a recreational space.
Example: "The children spent the entire afternoon playing in a tree house their parents built for them in the backyard."
Alternatives: "a tree fort" or "a tree cabin".
Exact(58)
Tree of love Spending a night in a tree house has enduring romantic appeal, particularly when the tree house in question is a scaled-down replica of a French château, complete with turrets.
It looked like a tree house.
I built a tree house.
There was a trampoline and a tree house.
We built a tree house and it was really cool.
"It's like being in a tree house," she said.
What if that person had built a doghouse out of them, a tree house, an outhouse?
He never threw a ball, built a tree house, or tucked us into bed.
"That's how I think of them, like grown-ups with a tree house," he said.
When we were twelve, we made out in a tree house.
In preschool, she'd climb into a tree house and perch there, refusing to come down.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com