WordNet
n. a large hall for holding exhibitions [syn: exhibition area]
Usage examples of "exhibition hall".
Seeking escape from the racket in the exhibition hall, they went out into the corridor, making for a grand-looking doorway.
Armed with various identifying documents, I presented myself at the huge Exhibition Hall at Elm and Fourteenth Street, and mingled with the press and the delegates while avoiding, as much as possible, the oratory.
He said there was somebody a-dying in the Exhibition Hall, and I was to go to the Boar's Head an' bring Dr.
The session of Ethereal Cluedo finished officially just after Arthur's ascension, as his body arrived at the morgue, around the same time that Max and Jimmy made their exit from the exhibition hall.
Gleason was in the exhibition hall when Austin arrived, and he didn't look happy.
Perhaps because of the murky light in the Exhibition Hall, the underside of my arm seemed to shine with the gleaming smoothness of a pearl, and was a beautiful ivory color.
All I knew was that he was out of place there in the Exhibition Hall.
Led by Prince Albert himself, plans for the Great Exhibition began in 1850, and soon ran into arguments about the proposed Exhibition Hall itself, and its location.
Santero pursued it, running into the crowd stampeding out of the exhibition hall.
The main exhibition hall of the palace, from Egwene's description.
But she had not seen herself as he had, back at the museum, in the shadowy confines of the Exhibition Hall, where the two of them had come face-to-face in a confrontation that might have led to the horrific fulfilment of his dream.
It was already dark there, for what light still entered the exhibition hall was shut off by the great bulk of the ship.
He couldn't help thinking of the Jovians, swimming forlornly in their tank of liquid hydrogen in the next exhibition hall.
We started with the records of Earl's Court, now an exhibition hall devoted to such things as cars and boats, but then a vast emporium for the processing of soldiers into civilians.