Thesaurus Dictionary
Synonyms and antonyms of Areas around buildings in American Thesaurus
Areas around buildings
campus (noun)
education an area of land containing all the main buildings of a university, school, or other organization such as a hospital
campus (noun)
an area of land containing all the main buildings of a large company or organization
car park (noun)
British a parking lot or parking garage
cloister (noun)
a covered path around an open area in the center of a large building such as a cathedral or monastery
close (noun)
British the area around a cathedral including the buildings belonging to it
land (noun)
an area that someone owns, often including the buildings on it. You can also refer to someone’s lands, and this has the same meaning
manor (noun)
an area of land containing a manor
peristyle (noun)
in architecture, a line of columns that surrounds an outdoor space such as a garden inside a building, or the space surrounded by these columns
precincts (noun)
British the area around an important building, especially a college or cathedral
quad (noun)
a square outdoor area surrounded by buildings, especially at a school or university
quadrangle (noun)
formal a quad
situation (noun)
formal the kind of area that surrounds a place, used especially by people who sell houses or property. A more usual word is location
square (noun)
an open area of land in the shape of a square, usually with buildings around it. “Square” is often used in the names of roads and can be written Sq.
stoep (noun)
South African a veranda or series of wooden steps leading up to a house
wind tunnel (noun)
a narrow place surrounded by high buildings where there is always a lot of wind
yard (noun)
American an area around a house that is used for sitting, playing, and growing plants in. The British word is garden.