Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    corridor
    /ˈkɒrɪdɔː/

    noun

    • 1. a long passage in a building from which doors lead into rooms: "his room lay at the very end of the corridor"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Learn the meaning of corridor as a noun, with synonyms, examples, and word history. A corridor is a passageway, a narrow strip of land, or a densely populated area.

  3. CORRIDOR definition: 1. a long passage in a building or train, especially with rooms on either side: 2. a long piece of…. Learn more.

  4. a long passage in a building, ship, or train, esp. with rooms on one or both side: The bathroom is at the end of the corridor. corridor noun [C] (REGION) a long, narrow region between two or more large cities, or an area along a busy road: the Boston to Washington corridor. the Route 28 corridor.

  5. a strip of land or airspace that affords access, either from a landlocked country to the sea (such as the Polish corridor, 1919-39, which divided Germany) or from a state to an exclave (such as the Berlin corridor, 1945–90, which passed through the former East Germany)

  6. A long hallway, especially one that has rooms opening up into it, is called a corridor. Late at night, hotel corridors all look alike. Be sure you try to open the right door with your key card. A corridor is also a tract of land that connects two places or runs along the side of a road.

  7. Learn the meaning, pronunciation and usage of the word corridor in English. Find out the different types of corridors, such as passages, land strips and railway sections, and see idioms and collocations with corridor.

  8. A corridor is a long passage in a building, with doors and rooms on one or both sides, or a strip of land that connects one country to another. Learn more about the word origin, pronunciation, and usage of corridor with Collins English Dictionary.