English-Wörter für 'Alternative spelling of dining hall.'
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noun
noun
- (Oxbridge slang) A meal served and eaten at a college's hall.
- The principal room of a secular medieval building.
- A manor house (originally because a magistrate's court was held in the hall of his mansion).
- A place for special professional education, or for conferring professional degrees or licences.
- A building providing student accommodation at a university.
- A corridor; a hallway.
- (Oxbridge) A college's canteen, which is often but not always coterminous with a traditional hall.
- A large meeting room.
- (India) A living room.
- a large building used by a college or university for teaching or research
- a large building for meetings or entertainment
- a large and imposing house
- the large room of a manor or castle
- a college or university building containing living quarters for students
- an interior passage or corridor onto which rooms open
- a large room for gatherings, receiving guests, or entertainment
- a large entrance or reception room or area
noun
- (restaurants, slang) A table seating two diners.
- (Canada, slang) A two-year prison sentence.
- (in the plural) Two-barrel (twin choke) carburetors (in the phrase three deuces: an arrangement on a common intake manifold).
- (tennis, table tennis, volleyball) A tied game where either player can win by scoring two consecutive points.
- (dice games) A side of a die with two spots.
- Synonym of devil (“something awkward or difficult”).
- (baseball) A curveball.
- (euphemistic, slang) Douche.
- A 1932 Ford.
- (Canada, US, slang) A bowel movement (the event or the result).
- (dice games) A cast of dice totalling two.
- A hand gesture consisting of a raised index and middle finger, a peace sign.
- (epithet) The Devil, used in exclamations of confusion or anger.
- (card games) A card with two pips, one of four in a standard deck of playing cards.
- one of the four playing cards in a deck that have two spots
- a word used in exclamations of confusion
- a tie in tennis or table tennis that requires winning two successive points to win the game
- the cardinal number that is the sum of one and one or a numeral representing this number
noun
noun
noun
- (Oxbridge slang) A meal served and eaten at a college's hall.
- The principal room of a secular medieval building.
- A manor house (originally because a magistrate's court was held in the hall of his mansion).
- A place for special professional education, or for conferring professional degrees or licences.
- A building providing student accommodation at a university.
- A corridor; a hallway.
- (Oxbridge) A college's canteen, which is often but not always coterminous with a traditional hall.
- A large meeting room.
- (India) A living room.
- a large building used by a college or university for teaching or research
- a large building for meetings or entertainment
- a large and imposing house
- the large room of a manor or castle
- a college or university building containing living quarters for students
- an interior passage or corridor onto which rooms open
- a large room for gatherings, receiving guests, or entertainment
- a large entrance or reception room or area
noun
- (restaurants, slang) A table seating two diners.
- (Canada, slang) A two-year prison sentence.
- (in the plural) Two-barrel (twin choke) carburetors (in the phrase three deuces: an arrangement on a common intake manifold).
- (tennis, table tennis, volleyball) A tied game where either player can win by scoring two consecutive points.
- (dice games) A side of a die with two spots.
- Synonym of devil (“something awkward or difficult”).
- (baseball) A curveball.
- (euphemistic, slang) Douche.
- A 1932 Ford.
- (Canada, US, slang) A bowel movement (the event or the result).
- (dice games) A cast of dice totalling two.
- A hand gesture consisting of a raised index and middle finger, a peace sign.
- (epithet) The Devil, used in exclamations of confusion or anger.
- (card games) A card with two pips, one of four in a standard deck of playing cards.
- one of the four playing cards in a deck that have two spots
- a word used in exclamations of confusion
- a tie in tennis or table tennis that requires winning two successive points to win the game
- the cardinal number that is the sum of one and one or a numeral representing this number