[
US
/ˈɛntɹiweɪ/
]
[ UK /ˈɛntɹɪwˌeɪ/ ]
[ UK /ˈɛntɹɪwˌeɪ/ ]
NOUN
-
something that provides access (to get in or get out)
beggars waited just outside the entryway to the cathedral
they waited at the entrance to the garden
How To Use entryway In A Sentence
- As she turned to gaze at a huge gilded mirror that hung to one side of the entryway, a very small, elflike man approached. One Night in Scotland
- The entryway was warm and welcoming, with a hat tree off to the left of the door and a sitting parlor to the right.
- Outside the Russia House, headquarters for the country's Olympic delegation in Turin, a horde of people gathered at the entryway, looking frozen and distraught.
- In one case I got as far as the building's entryway, which was being used to store bags of shirred fabric in pink-and-purple plaid.
- The double doors were missing, a fine veil of rainwater masking the entryway.
- The swordsman was a master of blades, not knots, but he bound the wrists and legs of the Visioness securely enough with cord drawn from the richly brocaded curtains that framed one entryway. A Triumph of Souls
- The walls of its entryway have murals depicting scenes honoring the Spanish and Mayan heritages.
- The lift pinged and the doors slid open, revealing an entryway tiled in cool green marble.
- He disappeared through the nearest door, leaving me alone in the huge entryway.
- At seven I was still yawning and stretching, sitting on the spindly little chair in our entryway, my forehead leaning against the window view the front yard.