0 a small building joined to or near to a larger one
1 a small building containing a seat over a hole that is used as a toilet, used esp. by people who live in houses that do not have water moving in pipes
While some of these spaces may be stores or other outhouses, many will have been individual dwellings.
Apart from a well, the remains of several outhouses (four and six posters) have been found on the yard, but presumably not all contemporary.
Refugees were accommodated in hastily requisitioned bungalows and outhouses.
Often these were adapted from stables and outhouses, betraying no outward sign of their purpose.
The rural outhouse, however primitive, was certainly not shared in the manner that cast-iron lavatories were in the city or at the pier.
Cabins generally lacked wells for water and had neither toilets nor outhouses of any kind.
As dating evidence for the palisade and the outhouses is lacking, the association with the house is an assumption.
In this place it was found most abundantly in a large outhouse which was tenanted by a number of rabbits.