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Vestibule   /vˈɛstɪbjˌul/   Listen
Vestibule

noun
1.
A large entrance or reception room or area.  Synonyms: antechamber, anteroom, entrance hall, foyer, hall, lobby.
2.
Any of various bodily cavities leading to another cavity (as of the ear or vagina).



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"Vestibule" Quotes from Famous Books



... words in Madame de Gabry's own vestibule; and I was about to take leave of my kind guide ...
— The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard • Anatole France

... others than those who had remained for the communion had passed out into the vestibule, and the closing of the doors muffled the loud clear voices of those on the outer steps. Genevieve touched Blake's arm. He started, and glanced up into the chancel. As he caught sight of the bishop and Mr. Vincent ...
— Out of the Primitive • Robert Ames Bennet

... smoke, drawing rapidly nearer, streaked the gray and ochre of the level plain, and presently the big engine and dusty cars rolled into the station amid the hoarse tolling of the bell. As they ran slowly past him, Edgar saw a police trooper leaning out from a vestibule, and when the train stopped the constable on the platform hurried toward the car. A hum of excited voices broke out and Edgar had some difficulty in pushing through the growing crowd to reach the steps. A constable, who had hard work to keep the others back, let him pass, and he found ...
— Ranching for Sylvia • Harold Bindloss

... three men sprang forward to aid, but Kern sternly motioned them back, and, lifting Uncle Sheba's portly form as if it were a child, carried the unconscious man to the vestibule. Scores were about to follow, but Tobe, with his wool bristling as never seen before, held up his hand impressively, and in the same loud whisper heard by all, remarked, "It doan took de hull cong'ration to wait on one po' sinner. Sabe yo'selves, brud'ren ...
— The Earth Trembled • E.P. Roe

... plenty of water, and fine scenery for a settlement. Next came the Hispano-American era of adobe, stage-coaches, and mule teams, now replaced by the purely American possessions, with brick, stone, vestibule trains, and all the wonders of electricity. It is now a commercial centre, a railroad terminal, with one hundred miles of street-car track within the city limits, carrying twelve million passengers yearly. It has outgrown the original grant of six miles square, and has ...
— A Truthful Woman in Southern California • Kate Sanborn


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