hall
noun
us
/hɑːl/ uk
/hɔːl/hall noun (PART OF HOUSE)
[ C ] (also hallway)

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- The kids always clutter the hall up with backpacks and coats and stuff.
- We're having a new carpet laid in the hall next week.
- A portrait of the earl takes pride of place in the entrance hall.
- She ran excitedly down the hall to greet her cousins.
- You should not be hanging around in the halls during classes.
hall noun (LARGE ROOM)
the Royal Albert Hall
- amphitheater
- antechamber
- anteroom
- atelier
- attic
- dormitory
- drawing room
- dressing room
- efficiency room
- en suite
- master bathroom
- master bedroom
- meat locker
- multi-chambered
- multi-room
- sunroom
- twin-bedded
- utility room
- vestibule
- waiting room
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hall noun (STUDENT BUILDING)
[ C or U ] UK (also UK halls); (US residence hall)
- His decision to stay at home is unsurprising when the cost of student halls in London is considered.
- An example of someone using English might be a Spanish Erasmus student chatting with Austrian friends in a student hall in Vienna.
- Security in residence halls is tight. Most dormitories are kept locked day and night.
- Accommodation in halls is allocated according to criteria that includes year of study, age and geographical distance from the university.
- He will live "in hall" and have his own room but must share a bathroom.
- academe
- academia
- anti-university
- beadle
- business school
- graduate assistant
- graduate from something
- graduate in something
- graduate with something
- graduation exercises
- Panhellenic
- pass degree
- poly
- polytechnic
- post-college
- university
- unselective
- vice chancellor
- virtual campus
- virtual classroom
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