Dictionary
dollhouse
noun
A miniature house used by children as a toy or as a base for domestic dioramas.
synonyms
Ai Feedback
The word 'dollhouse' is correct and commonly used in written English.
It refers to a miniature house or structure used for playing with dolls. Example: She spent hours decorating her dollhouse with tiny furniture and accessories, creating a perfect little home for her collection of dolls.
Exact(60)
There is a comical asymmetry between his efforts and theirs, but also something mysterious, as if his were made for a voodoo dollhouse.
She was also the author of Colleen Moore's Doll House (1935), a book about her collection of dolls and her elaborate dollhouse known as the Fairy Castle, both of which were put on permanent display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago.
Set in 17th-century Amsterdam during an age of Calvinism and repression, The Miniaturist was about a loveless arranged marriage and the eerie incidents connected with a dollhouse purchased to divert the new bride.
It was only when a family friend found him some funding that he decided to take a second crack at film-making and produced Welcome to the Dollhouse.
After the current exhibition ends, the owners hope to tour the dollhouse to other locations to raise money for children's charities.
A giant sculptural head doubles as a dollhouse and offers a chance to peer inside the brain of one of the artist's blank-eyed imps.
The brand-new Toys R Us in Times Square — Store No. 1595 in the chain — had, on four levels, a sixty-foot indoor Ferris wheel with toy-themed cars (Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head, Tonka Truck, Pokémon, and eleven others); a five-ton, thirty-four-foot-long animatronic "Jurassic Park" Tyrannosaurus rex; and a four-thousand-square-foot, two-story Barbie Dollhouse.
Hovering around the edges of the action is an F.B.I. agent, Paul Ballard (Tahmoh Penikett, of "Battlestar Galactica," a show that Whedon loves), who can't persuade his colleagues that the dollhouse exists and that people are being used in this way — turned into zombies, then into other people, then back into zombies.
A book from Queen Mary's dollhouse gets super-sized.
There is something vaguely familiar about her images — an affinity that falls somewhere between peering into the frozen tableaus of a dollhouse and logging into the Childhood stage of The Sims.
The "dollhouse" here is a facility — part laboratory, part corporation, part nefarious temp agency — where people's brains are electronically denatured and then reprogrammed with whatever qualities are needed by the clients who hire them.
Related(1)
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com