British word for an apartment

•Having an even and horizontal surface, or nearly so, without prominences or depressions; level without inclination; plane.•Lying at full length, or spread out, upon the ground; level with the ground or earth; prostrate; as, to lie flat on the ground; hence, fallen; laid low; ruined; destroyed.•Wanting relief; destitute of variety; without points of prominence and striking interest.•Tasteless; stale; vapid; insipid; dead; as, fruit or drink flat to the taste.•Unanimated; dull; uninteresting; without point or spirit; monotonous; as, a flat speech or composition.•Lacking liveliness of commercial exchange and dealings; depressed; dull; as, the market is flat.•Clear; unmistakable; peremptory; absolute; positive; downright.•Below the true pitch; hence, as applied to intervals, minor, or lower by a half step; as, a flat seventh; A flat.•Not sharp or shrill; not acute; as, a flat sound.•Sonant; vocal; -- applied to any one of the sonant or vocal consonants, as distinguished from a nonsonant (or sharp) consonant.•In a flat manner; directly; flatly.•Without allowance for accrued interest.•A level surface, without elevation, relief, or prominences; an extended plain; specifically, in the United States, a level tract along the along the banks of a river; as, the Mohawk Flats.•A level tract lying at little depth below the surface of water, or alternately covered and left bare by the tide; a shoal; a shallow; a strand.•Something broad and flat in form•A flat-bottomed boat, without keel, and of small draught.•A straw hat, broad-brimmed and low-crowned.•A car without a roof, the body of which is a platform without sides; a platform car.•A platform on wheel, upon which emblematic designs, etc., are carried in processions.•The flat part, or side, of anything; as, the broad side of a blade, as distinguished from its edge.•A floor, loft, or story in a building; especially, a floor of a house, which forms a complete residence in itself.•A horizontal vein or ore deposit auxiliary to a main vein; also, any horizontal portion of a vein not elsewhere horizontal.•A dull fellow; a simpleton; a numskull.•A character [/] before a note, indicating a tone which is a half step or semitone lower.•A homaloid space or extension.•To make flat; to flatten; to level.•To render dull, insipid, or spiritless; to depress.•To depress in tone, as a musical note; especially, to lower in pitch by half a tone.•To become flat, or flattened; to sink or fall to an even surface.•To fall form the pitch.

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