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Buckingham room
Answer for the clue "Buckingham room ", 7 letters:
parlour
Alternative clues for the word parlour
Word definitions for parlour in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. reception room in an inn or club where visitors can be received [syn: parlor ] a room in a private house or establishment where people can sit and talk and relax [syn: living room , living-room , sitting room , front room , parlor ]
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
chiefly British English spelling of parlor (q.v.).
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Parlour (or parlor ) is a name used for a variety of different reception rooms and public spaces in different historical periods.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Parlor \Par"lor\, n. [OE. parlour, parlur, F. parloir, LL. parlatorium. See Parley .] [Written also parlour .] A room for business or social conversation, for the reception of guests, etc. Specifically: The apartment in a monastery or nunnery where the ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES massage parlour milking parlour parlour game parlour maid tattoo parlour COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE front ▪ We'd just sit around in the front parlour of my house and smoke Typhoo Tea in my dad's pipe. ▪ He's ...
Usage examples of parlour.
I will accompany to the parlour of your convent a lady who shall not know who I am, and, consequently, shall have no occasion to introduce me.
Smallweed and a parting salutation to the scornful Judy, strides out of the parlour, clashing imaginary sabres and other metallic appurtenances as he goes.
The Justice behaved like a Man at my telling him soe, that is to say, cut an Antick Caper and made the Parlour ring with Shouting, then was very meeke and bid me sit, to rest myself, then stand, that I might not crush the Babe, then sit again.
The veil of the abbess was, however, thrown half back, and discovered a countenance, whose chaste dignity was sweetened by the smile of welcome, with which she addressed the Countess, whom she led, with Blanche and Mademoiselle Bearn, into the convent parlour, while the Count and Henri were conducted by the Superior to the refectory.
George supped with her, and the two of them sat matily in the parlour behind red curtains, and with a baize-covered parrot between them on the table, when the meal was over, George smoking, and Mrs.
THIRTY-FIVE William Rackham, head of Rackham Perfumeries, slightly the worse for the several stiff brandies he drank after the departure of the police, stands in his parlour staring out at the rain, wondering how many bits of paper are still unaccounted for: how many are still fluttering through the evening air, or plastered to the windows of his Notting Hill neighbours, or being read by astounded pedestrians when they pluck them off hedges and fence-railings.
All they can see in it is riding in parlour cars and playing auction pinocle in four-dollar-a-day hotels.
I answered by saying that if I were her lover I was much to be pitied in being condemned to go to the parlour, and no farther.
Upon ringing the bell, Cuthbert told the porteress, as had been arranged, that he had called on a message from Dame Editha, and he was immediately ushered into the parlour of the convent, where, a minute or two later, he was joined by the lady abbess.
A spare parlour and bedroom I refurnished entirely, with old mahogany and crimson upholstery: I laid canvas on the passage, and carpets on the stairs.
Josie Scally, neat and lissom in her parlour maid dress, opened the back door of Mrs.
William, blinking sweat as Samuel led him to a parlour with a servery, decided that money was their character, the thing that named them for a group.
I did what I could to oblige him, though things nearly came apart when I made a sharpish turn into the parlour.
And now he had penetrated right to the end of the pipeline, right into the parlour of Mr Seraffimo Spang who, with his brother in London, and with the mysterious ABC, ran the biggest smuggling operation in the world.
There were squills and ivy all over the Academy, embroidered on the curtains in each bedroom, and on all the cushions and screens, painted in a frieze around the wall of the parlour, and even stamped on the pats of butter.