0 a house in a town or city, usually a comfortable, expensive one in a fashionable area:
Deering omitted gentry families residing either permanently in the town, or maintaining a town house for regular visits.
A larger town house that was excavated had a dirt-floor entrance area, equipped with a well and a kitchen sink.
Many aristocratic families had to choose between a town house and a country one, the maintenance of both now being economically impossible.
This is a town house.
There is a different subsidy for a rural house than for a town house.
They deliberately forced up local authority and new town house rents.
In one sense it is a remarkable town house.
That would necessarily involve substantial consultation and would mean that the town house would have access to information that it does not have at present.