Crossword clues for lounges
Wiktionary
n. (plural of lounge English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: lounge)
Usage examples of "lounges".
Crew quarters nestled in the upper hull groove, a chrome-silver toroid equipped with lounges, cabins, a small hangar for the atmospheric flyer, fusion generators, fuel, life-support units.
Empty lounges and corridors were filled with drawn-out creaking sounds, composite furniture was splintering, collapsing onto the floor, each fresh fragment hitting with the force of a hammer blow, leaving a deep indentation.
Patricia Mangano who was in charge of the guard detail allowed the children to play in the opulent lounges while parents mixed freely, speculating on their circumstances and rehashing old gossip as only their profession knew how.
Tanks, lounges, corridor tubes, thermal-dump panels, and docking bays were sandwiched between the framework of grey-white alloy struts, tapering spires extended out from each corner, tipped with a cluster of fusion drive tubes to hold the structure’s attitude stable.
He was in one of the docking ledge lounges, overlooking the pedestals where several hellhawks were perched.
During the day, they gathered together in the building’s lounges and public areas to provide each other with whatever mutual comfort they could muster.
Going through pub lounges, shop store rooms, offices, even kitchens and one-room flats.
There are doors to the Women’s and Men’s Lounges, but except for emergencies they stay locked during working hours.
For them there are men-only and women-only Lounges, like smaller versions of the Parlor, each with its own private entrance and spiral staircase.
A smaller percentage choose either the west or east door, which lead to the female-only and male-only lounges I’ve mentioned before.
He was forced repeatedly to circle through offices, laundry drops, lounges, counting turnings and open doors as he went.
Those rooms were larger and more comfortable and also closer to the First Class dining room, lounges and the main hall, where most of the ship's community activity was centered.
Someone had brought in some low upholstered stools and a cocktail table from one of the lounges, fashioning an impromptu Syprian dining set.
It was a long dark-paneled smoking room, probably a quarter the size of some of the First Class lounges, the chairs and tables pushed back against the wood-paneled walls and covered with dust sheets.