See also: semi-detached

English

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Etymology

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From semi- +‎ detached.

Adjective

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semidetached (not comparable)

  1. Alternative spelling of semi-detached
    • 2007 March 4, David Scharfenberg, “Homey, if You Don’t Mind a Building Boom”, in New York Times[1]:
      The houses, made of brick and siding, are generally smaller one- and two-family dwellings, many semidetached.

Noun

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semidetached (plural semidetacheds)

  1. Alternative spelling of semi-detached
    • 2013, Robert Barnard, A City of Strangers:
      Semidetacheds and council housing estates alternated with the occasional high-rise block []