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AISLE |
Passageway |
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LANE |
Passageway |
|
SHAFT |
Vertical passageway |
|
ALLEY |
A passageway |
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|
ASS |
Fool caught in passageway |
|
ARCADE |
Covered passageway with shops |
|
YAWN |
A chasm, mouth, or passageway. |
|
TRESPASS |
Unlawfully enter part of theatre’s passageway |
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HALL |
Cleared passageway in a crowd; -- formerly an exclamation. |
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CORRIDOR |
A gallery or passageway leading to several apartments of
a house. |
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MANWAY |
A small passageway, as in a mine, that a man may pass
through. |
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LOBBY |
An apartment or passageway in the fore part of an
old-fashioned cabin under the quarter-deck. |
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PIPE |
A passageway for the air in speaking and breathing; the
windpipe, or one of its divisions. |
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PORT |
A passageway; an opening or entrance to an inclosed place; a
gate; a door; a portal. |
|
SHED |
To divide, as the warp threads, so as to form a shed, or
passageway, for the shuttle. |
|
TUNNEL |
To make an opening, or a passageway, through or under;
as, to tunnel a mountain; to tunnel a river. |
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PORE |
A minute opening or passageway; an interstice between the
constituent particles or molecules of a body; as, the pores of stones. |
|
CAPONIERE |
A work made across or in the ditch, to protect it from
the enemy, or to serve as a covered passageway. |
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SHUTTER |
A removable cover, or a gate, for closing an aperture of
any kind, as for closing the passageway for molten iron from a ladle. |
|
AVENUE |
The principal walk or approach to a house which is
withdrawn from the road, especially, such approach bordered on each
side by trees; any broad passageway thus bordered. |
|
PASS |
An opening, road, or track, available for passing;
especially, one through or over some dangerous or otherwise
impracticable barrier; a passageway; a defile; a ford; as, a mountain
pass. |
|
GALLERY |
A long and narrow corridor, or place for walking; a
connecting passageway, as between one room and another; also, a long
hole or passage excavated by a boring or burrowing animal. |
|
BRIDGE |
A structure, usually of wood, stone, brick, or iron,
erected over a river or other water course, or over a chasm, railroad,
etc., to make a passageway from one bank to the other. |
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STRAIT |
A (comparatively) narrow passageway connecting two large
bodies of water; -- often in the plural; as, the strait, or straits, of
Gibraltar; the... |
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GATE |
A large door or passageway in the wall of a city, of an
inclosed field or place, or of a grand edifice, etc.; also, the movable
structure of ti... |