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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
clubhouse
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And again, the Club decided to alter the clubhouse.
▪ But there were also a boatload of questions about his defense, maturity and ability to get along in the clubhouse.
▪ In 1929 an architect was engaged and recommended doing nothing on the clubhouse.
▪ In the clubhouse I learned that we had lost nothing, materially, just the match, and that was enough.
▪ Plans have been prepared by a local architect for a clubhouse, traditional pavilion and all-weather nets.
▪ The city used revenue from the course and clubhouse to pay off the $ 7 million it borrowed to build the course.
▪ Tuttle and Garagiola visit major league clubhouses, telling the story, and they have achieved some results.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Clubhouse

Clubhouse \Club"house`\, n. A house occupied by a club.

Wiktionary
clubhouse

n. 1 Any building used by a club for meetings or social activities. 2 A locker room and possibly associated rooms used by an athletic team, 3 (context golf English) A building at a golf course that houses various activities associated with golf.

WordNet
clubhouse

n. a building occupied by a club; "the clubhouse needed a new roof" [syn: club]

Wikipedia
Clubhouse (TV series)

Clubhouse is an American drama television series starring Jeremy Sumpter, Dean Cain, Christopher Lloyd, Mare Winningham and Kirsten Storms and produced by Icon Productions in association with Spelling Television. The theme song is " Our Lives" by The Calling.

Five episodes were broadcast on CBS in fall 2004. CBS broadcast both the high-definition and analog program through its affiliates. The five episodes that aired on CBS, along with six additional episodes that were not broadcast over CBS's airwaves, were picked up by HDNet in June 2005. Universal HD began rerunning the series in late 2009.

Clubhouse

Clubhouse may refer to:

  • The meetinghouse of:
    • A club, an association of two or more people united by a common interest or goal
    • In the United States, a country club
    • In the United Kingdom, a gentlemen's club
  • A Wendy house, or playhouse, a small house for children to play in
  • The locker room of a baseball team, which at the highest professional level also features eating and entertainment facilities
  • A community centre, a public location where community members gather for group activities, social support, public information, and other purposes
  • Clubhouse Model of Psychosocial Rehabilitation, a program of support and opportunities for people with severe and persistent mental illnesses
  • Clubhouse sandwich
Clubhouse (album)

Clubhouse is an album by American jazz saxophonist Dexter Gordon. It was recorded in 1965, but not released until 1979 by Blue Note Records.

Usage examples of "clubhouse".

They tumbled through aerobatics, shouting and laughing, until they were pleasantly tired, went to the clubhouse, turned in their wing suits, and showered.

They tumbled through aerobatics, shouting and laughing, until they were pleasantly tired, went to the clubhouse, turned in their wingsuits, and showered.

There was also a tiny patio area behind the coffeehouse that Charlie always meant to get done up so we could use it for more seating, but he never did, maybe partly because it had become a kind of private clubhouse for some of the regulars.

Friendly gangs stand guard at the Sherbrooke chapter clubhouse in Lennoxville.

Most of the owners came down from the Clubhouse to watch the saddling of the runners in the Jockey Club Race Train Stakes, and all the sportier of them wore the rosettes.

Clubhouse to watch the saddling of the runners in the Jockey Club Race Train Stakes, and all the sportier of them wore the rosettes.

Past Scott Hatteberg and Greg Myers, the two lefties on the bench who had thought they had the night off, rushing back through the clubhouse to the batting cage to take some practice swings, in case they are asked to pinch-hit.

In the situation we were in, which was one of total, complete and utter heat and boredom and wondering what manner of crawling scabby insect you were going to dine on next, the fact of four hundred headless Filipinos was a topic for pleasant clubhouse gossip, something to discuss briefly in mild awe and almost admiration for the ginks for at least having a sense of spectacle and to be grateful for in a way because it took our minds off our own problems.

You are looking past a forest toward the clubhouse of the Royal Dornoch Golf Club, an unassuming edifice where no doubt golfers are gathering.

I copied it off some phreaks who were using it to protect their clubhouse.

We had seats looking down on the finish line, color TV and a free bar in the press room, and a selection of passes that would take us anywhere from the clubhouse roof to the jockey room.

Female voyeurs go so far as to peek through windows of the clubhouse where the men gather to drink beer, sometimes with their faces partially exposed.

He gave a genial but firm wave to the vice chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, then began the trudge to the clubhouse.

Finally, Mister JayMac sent Muscles, Curriden, Fanning, and Sudikoff out there—at some peril, for the crowd started catcalling at once—to subdue Hoey and drag him, thrashing and frothing, if need be, into the clubhouse.

Within minutes, he was turning off Three Chopt Road into a long driveway that led to the stately country club with its elegant clubhouse, tennis and paddleball courts, and sprawling golf course.