hearthside
English
Etymology
Noun
hearthside (plural hearthsides)
- The area around the fireplace in the living-room of a family house.
- 1961, Norma Lorre Goodrich, “Beowulf”, in The Medieval Myths, New York: The New American Library, page 43:
- “How much death must an old king have seen on the field of war, in the play of swords, without its grinning jaw coming over his own hearthside.”
- 2000 January 11, Judi James, “How was your day, dear?”, in The Guardian[1], archived from the original on 9 May 2014:
- Working women are stressing out their male partners by discussing business problems around the family hearthside.
Adjective
hearthside (not comparable)
- Used to identify something as normally being in the area of the fireplace.
- A hearthside rug.
- Pertaining to an activity normal to the household, usually associated with the living-room, whether or not it has a real fireplace.
- Every Wednesday we have a hearthside meeting of the family.
- This is a good hearthside book.