debodun
SF VIP
- Location
- way upstate in New York, USA
Yours would be my definition.To me a cellar is an unfinished, lowest part of a house. A basement is the lowest part of a house, but more finished.
In my former house I had a cellar:
View attachment 286598
In my current house, I have a basement:
View attachment 286600
My house is on a raised foundation with a crawl space underneath.Cellars and basements seem to be a "back East" thing, never saw either in SoCal, only concrete slabs.
Same here in Massachusetts. Terms used interchangeably.Cellars and basements are rarities here. Even with two and three story homes, the lowest floor in most homes nearly always street level.
When I lived in NY/NJ, the terms basement and cellar were generally used interchangeably, even within a household. Sort of like saying "upstairs" or "on the second floor" would be.

They are in the garage.How are homes without cellars or basements heated? Every house I've lived in had a furnace in the cellar/basement.
that's a really nice basement.. you could open a shop down there ( store)..To me a cellar is an unfinished, lowest part of a house. A basement is the lowest part of a house, but more finished.
In my former house I had a cellar:
View attachment 286598
In my current house, I have a basement:
View attachment 286600
They have "service closets." In newer homes they're usually inside the house or in the attached garage. In older homes they are usually in a lean-to outside the house or in the attached garage.How are homes without cellars or basements heated? Every house I've lived in had a furnace in the cellar/basement.
And here... I know that the proper definitions are different, but both are used for the same area of the house.Same here in Massachusetts. Terms used interchangeably.
That's a photo from the real estate ad when the previous owner had it. It doesn't look like that now, at least the content.that's a really nice basement.. you could open a shop down there ( store)..
And here... I know that the proper definitions are different, but both are used for the same area of the house.
According to Merriam-Webster and Dictionary.com, the primary definitions are the same and they're synonyms for one another.I didn't realize those two words referred to different things! Wow - I learned something today! Our house has been here a LOooooong time so I always refer to it as the "creepy basement." Locally we would call it "down cellah" but either way, we try to keep very little down there among the damp and spider webs. A dehumidifier runs all summer and a bulkhead door with stairs opens to the outside for easy access to the furnace, electrical panel and water treatment system for repair people.