Vine's Expository Dictionary: View Entry
αὐλή aulḗ, ow-lay'; from the same as G109; a yard (as open to the wind); by implication, a mansion:—court, (sheep-)fold, hall, palace.
The KJV translates Strong's G833 in the following manner: palace (7x), hall (2x), sheepfold (with G4263) (1x), fold (1x), court (1x).
among the Greeks in Homer's time, an uncovered space around the house, enclosed by a wall, in which the stables stood, hence among the Orientals that roofless enclosure by a wall, in the open country in which the flocks were herded at night, a sheepfold
the uncovered courtyard of the house. In the O.T. particularly of the courts of the tabernacle and of the temple in Jerusalem. The dwellings of the higher classes usually had two, one exterior, between the door and the street; the other interior, surrounded by the buildings of the dwelling itself. The latter is mentioned Mat. 26:69.
the house itself, a palace
Strong's Number G833 matches the Greek αὐλή (aulē),
which occurs 12 times in 12 verses
in the TR Greek.