Pronunciation: /ˈkɔrəˌdɔr/
noun a long passage in a building from which doors lead into rooms
A1 I walked down the corridor to get to my classroom.
A2 The hotel corridor was long and dimly lit.
B1 The hospital corridor was filled with patients and medical staff.
B2 The underground corridor led to a secret chamber hidden beneath the castle.
C1 The grand corridor of the palace was adorned with intricate tapestries and marble statues.
C2 As I walked through the corridor of the art gallery, I marveled at the masterpieces on display.
adjective corridor (used as an adjective) refers to something related to or resembling a corridor
A1 The corridor was long and narrow.
A2 We walked down the dimly lit corridor to find our classroom.
B1 The hotel had a beautifully decorated corridor leading to the rooms.
B2 The hospital corridor was bustling with nurses and doctors rushing to attend to patients.
C1 The grand corridor in the palace was adorned with intricate tapestries and paintings.
C2 The futuristic office building had a high-tech corridor with automated doors and lighting.
formal The students walked quietly down the school corridor.
informal Let's meet at the end of the corridor before class.
slang I heard there's a shortcut through the back corridor.
figurative The corridor of time stretches infinitely in both directions.
corridored
corridors
more corridor
most corridor
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will corridor
have corridor
is corridor
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to corridor
corridoring
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