Cottage in a sentence as a noun

Take your fleet with you to the cottage or across the country, why not?

Maybe it's her cottage or trailer, I really don't know, but don't believe anything they say on the news. A lot of people would go insane in a 200sqft space.

It's a little cottage industry, there's a few places that do these things with integration, and... it sucked.

I'm one of them and I like nothing more than sitting in my cottage garden on a sunny day with a laptop and wifi connection. It's a great place to think.

The rent for my 17th century cottage with garden in a Yorkshire village wouldn't get me a room in a shared house in an undesirable part of London. I don't understand the pull of the capital.

It must be at once obvious to everyone that desktop 3D printing is both vital to the future and currently a "cottage" industry. What matters more: the future, or our personal notions of what's classy?

I think it's time to be clear about what the concern is here, because it's become a bit of a cottage industry to call out provocative headlines, wave your arms around a bit, and then claim the readers are being manipulated. Kind of "Nothing to see here, folks.

SEO is a nasty little cottage industry that benefits from the algorithmic monoculture in search. On a somewhat related note, there is only one display advertising program that anyone cares about.

A whole cottage industry around Python's slowness. Which is nice to exist, but not an ideal solution: suddenly you have 2 codebases to manage in 2 different languages, makefiles, portability issues, etc etc.

Moreover, there is a cottage industry of being an "expert" to testify for some of these technical issues. They are often experts in as much as they have been called before as "experts", even thought the industry they are supposedly explaining might consider them charlatans -- people who just know how to dress well and talk ********, but in a very convincing tone.

But then, this makes Bitcoin mostly a cottage industry taking advantage of technology to side-step banking regulations. I see two likely outcomes -- regulations are extended to BC and BC companies start charging as much as banks to compensate for the inherent riskiness of the business, or banks push for regulatory reform while making their services significantly cheaper and faster.

The documentation is so famously patchy, contradictory and impenetrable that an entire cottage industry of talmudic literature has sprung up around it overnight. I've spent the last two weeks slicing and dicing the developer guide and all the directly related API documentation -- this one-page demo is better than the entire Angular tutorial.

There was even an entire cottage industry documenting and recommending/selling replacements particularly for analog components on the power board, some of which were perhaps a bit under-spec-ed in the original designs and prone to noticeable deterioration as well as outright, total failure.

Consider the cottage industry around testing tools: fixtures, factories, testing lifecycle methods, mocks, stubs, matchers, code generators, monkey patching, special test environments, natural language DSLs, etc. These testing tools are valuable, but they would be a lot more valuable if they were being applied against the essential complexity of problems, rather than the incidental complexity of familiar tools.

Cottage definitions

noun

a small house with a single story

See also: bungalow