[ US /ˈbɑɹˌɹum/ ]
[ UK /bˈæɹuːm/ ]
NOUN
  1. a room or establishment where alcoholic drinks are served over a counter
    he drowned his sorrows in whiskey at the bar
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How To Use barroom In A Sentence

  • Together they shoot up, play soccer, get into barroom brawls, mug tourists and steal to support their habits.
  • I saw that life was not like books at all, but more like headlines-barroom brawls, a blues song sung with flatted notes.
  • The songs have a bit of a barroom sound, and there are a few blues numbers, and even one honky-tonk piano song.
  • Beat up a freshman in a barroom one night and you can be back on the court three days later.
  • If you go to mid-night Mass, and you're the devout type, don't be scandalized if it smells like a barroom, or that some hussey hardly has any clothes on under her coat. Archive 2006-12-10
  • I didn't really care about barroom chat, but her animation made her even better to look at so I listened. FOOLS GOLD
  • Coming back, he walked through the barroom, where people waiting for the train were drinking.
  • The fight had been one of those epic barroom brawls right out of a John Wayne movie.
  • In discussing "The Night Café" 1888, a well-known depiction of a disreputable barroom in Arles—a jarring composition featuring bright yellow gaslight shining on blood-red walls—they tell us that "Vincent began his dissonant painting in a dissonant mood. A Stranger to Himself
  • Together they shoot up, play soccer, get into barroom brawls, mug tourists and steal to support their habits.
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