Where does your family hang out? My family is small. Just me and Alberto and our dog Cholo. Our house is small too. And our Living Room is small. But the decor is huge ha ha.

Anyway, what do you call the room where your family hangs out in?
The multi-purpose aspect of a Keeping Room today is similar to its function in Colonial days.
Keeping Rooms date back to Colonial times when families would sleep in that area when the rest of the house was cold.

Although people don't regularly sleep in Keeping Rooms now and there were certainly no televisions in Colonial times, children still play there and families gather there to read, talk and often keep warm by the fire. In warmer climates a fireplace is not usually a part of a Keeping Room, but in many regions a fireplace may be ornamental rather than heat-producing.

and I have used soft furnishings there from time to time,
but I wouldn't call it a Keeping Room
(even if Alberto and Cholo sleep in the wing chair from time to time).

A Keeping Room is an area just off the kitchen of a home.
The image above shows the modern Keeping Room configuration
Since the area could be heated by the kitchen stove, it often provided the only heated place in the house. Today, a Keeping Room is called by many different names, depending on one's geographical location, such as a Family Room, a Great Room and a Hearth Room.

When entertaining, they can also talk to guests easily from the kitchen. A Keeping Room can be small or large, but it is always next to the kitchen.


The Family Room is designed to be a place where family and guests gather for group recreation like talking, reading, watching TV, and other family activities.


A living room, also known as sitting room, lounge room or lounge (in the United Kingdom and Australia), is a room for entertaining guests, reading, watching TV or other activities. The term front room can also be used to describe a living room, because in many homes the living room is at the very front. In modern homes and apartments, the living room has replaced the old-fashioned front parlour.
In the 19th century, the front parlour was the room in the house used for formal social events, including where the recently deceased were laid out before their funeral. The term marks the twentieth-century effort of architects and builders to strip the parlour of its burial and mourning associations. This room was relabeled with the more affirmative term "living room" in the 20th century.
A typical western living room will be furnished with a sofa, chairs, occasional tables, a television or stereo equipment, and bookshelves, as well as other pieces of furniture. Traditionally, a sitting room in the United Kingdom would have a fireplace. In Japan, people traditionally sat on tatami instead of chairs, but Western-style decor is also common these days.
In the United States, sometimes the living room is reserved for more formal and quiet entertaining while a separate recreation room or family room is used for more casual activities and drinking.
In recent years, the term "great room" has come to be used to denote the family room, especially if it is open to the kitchen, and may feature a vaulted ceiling.
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