[ UK /ɪntˈi‍əɹɪɐ/ ]
[ US /ˌɪnˈtɪɹiɝ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. located inward
    she thinks she has no soul, no interior life, but the truth is that she has no access to it
    an internal sense of rightousness
    Beethoven's manuscript looks like a bloody record of a tremendous inner battle
  2. inside the country
    the nation's internal politics
    the British Home Office has broader responsibilities than the United States Department of the Interior
  3. inside and toward a center
    interior regions of the earth
  4. of or coming from the middle of a region or country
    upcountry districts
  5. situated within or suitable for inside a building
    interior decoration
    an interior bathroom without windows
    an interior scene
NOUN
  1. the inner or enclosed surface of something
  2. the region that is inside of something
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How To Use interior In A Sentence

  • The interiors are beautifully kept and the countryside is lush and fruitful. Times, Sunday Times
  • It sits a little lower and the lower floor means more luggage and interior space. The Sun
  • The four of us stayed for a couple of nights in the Rest House at Takoradi, which gave us a few hours to walk the beaches and paddle in the ocean, and to luxuriate in the fresh sea breezes after the heavy atmosphere of the interior.
  • She even has ambitions to return to college and major in interior design and business.
  • Interior spaces may also be gendered: the author explores both the activities particular to women, such as needlework or lace-making, and the objects related to female and maternal domesticity.
  • The interior of the suction device is sleeved with a nozzle unit device which can inject backwash water to a suction port and the low pressure area of the filter screen part.
  • An open casement window provides the painted studio's interior light.
  • Robert Dossie described three categories of watercolor painting — miniature, the most delicate; distemper, which is coarser, uses less expensive colors in a glue or casein binder, and is appropriate for canvas hangings, ceilings, and other interior decorative painting purposes; and fresco. reference As a technique practiced by the Romans, fresco painting was a subject of particularly interest in the antiquity-obsessed eighteenth-century. The Creation of Color in Eighteenth-Century Europe
  • The part that you don't expect is the yellow flavoring on the interior called "lupulin" which is where the bitter for the beer comes from. TreeHugger
  • Sometimes a project of this kind will involve working alongside an architect and interior designer.
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