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backrooms

n. (plural of backroom English)

Usage examples of "backrooms".

Most Castle operators took down their Coca-Cola signs and stored them in their backrooms.

In a garage in Rome, in the backrooms of a Paris bakery, in the cellar of a plush London home, and in the laundry room of a small country house.

At least not compared to the warehouse backrooms and underground chambers used by Miiska’s undeads.

I remember the Surete and the Gestapo men as extremely clean, eating huge Arab meals in nameless backrooms in the souk of Algiers, their voices melodic with confidence, softened by self-importance.

She had nosed out a couple of licensed traders who had backrooms where they bought smuggled artifacts they euphemistically called sourceless.

So there were engineers and controllers and mission managers from Mission Control and the science backrooms, here at Houston, and some pad technicians and managers from the Cape.

Those whose work puts them in touch with the realities of station-house backrooms will find that Woolrich, tormented recluse that he was, knew those realities too.

Four men had been familiar with that basement area and what was to be found down there—and all four of them had been so terrified that they had locked it from their minds, had attempted to shove it from the conscious arena of their mental processes down into the backrooms where it could be forgotten.

He affected buttonholes and pale suits, and he pretended on the flimsiest grounds to an intimate familiarity with the large backrooms of Whitehall.