hall
- hall
hall
W2S1 [ho:l US ho:l] n
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1¦(entrance)¦
2¦(corridor)¦
3¦(public building)¦
4¦(for students)¦
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[: Old English; Origin: heall]
1.) ¦(ENTRANCE)¦
the area just inside the door of a house or other building, that leads to other rooms
in the hall
▪ We hung our coats in a cupboard in the hall.
▪ a huge tiled entrance hall
2.) ¦(CORRIDOR)¦
a passage in a building or house that leads to many of the rooms
▪ Each floor had ten rooms on both sides of the hall.
3.) ¦(PUBLIC BUILDING)¦
a building or large room for public events such as meetings or dances
sports/exhibition/banqueting etc hall
▪ The school has a new sports hall.
▪ Five hundred people filled the lecture hall.
church/village hall
(=used by people who live in a place)
▪ A coffee morning is to be held in the village hall.
▪ a concert at Carnegie Hall
4.) ¦(FOR STUDENTS)¦
especially BrE a college or university building where students live
American Equivalent: dormin hall
▪ For a brief time they had shared a room in hall.
Dictionary of contemporary English.
2013.
Synonyms:
Look at other dictionaries:
hall — hall … Dictionnaire des rimes
hall — [ ol ] n. m. • 1672, répandu v. 1868; angl. hall; cf. halle ♦ Grande salle servant d entrée, d accès (dans un édifice public, une grande maison particulière). ⇒ entrée, salle, vestibule. Hall d hôtel. Le hall de la gare Saint Lazare, dit salle… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Hall — bezeichnet: Nachhall in der Akustik Hall (Familienname), ein Familienname – dort auch zu Namensträgern Hall ist der Name folgender Orte: Schwäbisch Hall, früher Hall am Kocher, eine Kreisstadt in Baden Württemberg Bad Hall, eine Stadtgemeinde im… … Deutsch Wikipedia
*hall — ● hall nom masculin (anglais hall, du francique halla, halle) Salle de grandes dimensions, haute de plafond, par où l on accède dans certains édifices publics, dans les gares, dans les hôtels, etc., ainsi que dans les demeures importantes des… … Encyclopédie Universelle
hall — [ hɔl ] noun count *** 1. ) a long narrow passage inside a building with doors along it leading to rooms a ) the area inside the front door of a house or other building, that leads to other rooms: I wish you wouldn t leave your shoes in the hall … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Hall [1] — Hall, 1) Stadt in Tirol, Bezirksh. Innsbruck, 552 m ü. M., am linken Ufer des von hier an schiffbaren Inn, an der Südbahnlinie Kufstein Innsbruck Ala und an der Dampfstraßenbahn Innsbruck H., Sitz eines Bezirksgerichts und eines Revierbergamts,… … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
Hall — (h[add]l), n. [OE. halle, hal, AS. heal, heall; akin to D. hal, OS. & OHG. halla, G. halle, Icel. h[ o]ll, and prob. from a root meaning, to hide, conceal, cover. See {Hell}, {Helmet}.] 1. A building or room of considerable size and stateliness,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
HALL (A.) — HALL ADELAIDE (1904 1993) Le jazz ne fut qu’une flamboyante parenthèse dans sa vie. C’est pour avoir un jour de 1927 rencontré un magicien nommé Duke Ellington et enregistré avec lui deux titres qui comptent parmi les premiers coups d’éclat… … Encyclopédie Universelle
hall — O.E. heall place covered by a roof, spacious roofed residence, temple, law court, from P.Gmc. *khallo to cover, hide (Cf. O.S., O.H.G. halla, Ger. halle, Du. hal, O.N. höll hall; O.E. hell, Goth. halja hell ), from PIE root *kel … Etymology dictionary
hall — Voz inglesa que se emplea con frecuencia en español para designar la pieza o sala a la que se accede al entrar en una casa o un edificio. Se recomienda usar en su lugar los equivalentes españoles vestíbulo, entrada o recibidor (este último solo… … Diccionario panhispánico de dudas