Castle

//ˈkɑːsəl//

Word Type

Noun
Proper Noun
Verb

The word "castle" can be used as noun, proper noun and verb.

Word Relationships

Opposites (Antonyms)

Dbpedia Genre

Derived Terms

Etymologically Related To

Has Property

Narrower Terms (Hyponyms)

Manner Of

Related Terms

add ages ancient ancient defence ancient tower ball batsman battlement battlements big big dwelling big house big palace bowl bricks build building cannot castling check chess close helmet construction create defence defensive dragons drawbridge dungeons dwelling end england europe existing fairy fairy tales fantasy fantasy house far form fort fortification fortified fortress full giant giant house go grand grand building grand dwelling gwr has has moat have historic historic mansion home house housing imitation in england japanese chess keep king king building king home king house king residence kingdom kingdoms kings kings home kings house kings live kings queens kings residence kings seat knight knight house knights knights home knights princesses knights residence knock over large large building large house left length live make manor mansion may medieval medieval building medieval fortress medieval structure middle middle ages moat moat drawbridge moat keep moats monarch monarch home mote move must nearest neither nobleman now old old building old fortress old housing old mansion palace people piece place place live position princess princess house princess protection princesses protect protecting protecting kings protection queen queen house queens queens house real residence rich rich people right rock rock building rook rooms royal royal dwelling royal home royal house royal palace royalty rule same sand sand building seat separate several side siege similar special spired spired palace spires square stone stone building stone dwelling stone fortress stone house stone mansion stone walls stronghold structure stumps such that tales tower towers turn turrets turrets moat vacant walls way windsor yorker

Similar Terms

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.