🇬🇧 Chateau meaning: English Vocabulary Flash Card
noun
A chateau is a very large, fancy house or castle in France. It usually has many rooms, tall towers or pointed roofs, and big gardens. Long ago, rich families, lords, or kings lived in chateaux. Today, people sometimes visit chateaux like museums or stay in them like special hotels. A chateau looks like something from a fairy tale, with grand staircases, shining windows, and beautiful decorations.
There were so many paintings of serious people in the chateau that I sneezed and then apologized to all of them.
I asked if the chateau had a dungeon, and the guide said, “Only for people who touch the paintings.”
The chateau’s staircase was so grand that I felt I needed a theme song just to walk down it.
At the chateau, even the dog had a fancier bedroom than I do at home.
In France, some chateaux are over 500 years old, which means they’ve been patiently listening to tourists mispronounce “chateau” for centuries.
At dusk, Anna ran up the long drive to the chateau. The chateau's towers cut the sky; the chateau's stone steps rang under her feet. She pushed the chateau's heavy door and light spilled into the hall. She saw the old chair by the window and laughed and cried. The chateau felt like home again.
🧑🎓 CEFR Level: C2 Proficient
This word is at the C2 level, which means it represents the highest mastery of English. It’s often used in specialized or highly formal contexts and helps you communicate with precision and subtlety, much like a native speaker.
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