How To Use Open-air In A Sentence

  • For shade, the ramada, a classic freestanding, open-air structure, is still a common feature in desert gardens.
  • A drop-dead-gorgeous crowd was tangoing away in a makeshift, open-air amphitheater.
  • Jools Holland is playing an open-air concert near Tunbridge Wells soon.
  • It is hot and the fish are lying out on concrete tables in covered open-air areas. Smithsonian Insider
  • There are open-air cinema club nights in summer and year-round talks by artists and writers. Times, Sunday Times
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  • A drop-dead-gorgeous crowd was tangoing away in a makeshift, open-air amphitheater.
  • On the other is the open-air lounge, with a fully stocked bar and comfy Indonesian daybeds with plump throw pillows, and low tables that double as footrests.
  • By night, check out the shows in the open-air theatre or take to the beach for fireworks and live music. The Sun
  • Common problems include drones being used to deliver drugs, mobile phones and food to prisoners and to capture footage of football matches and concerts from open-air stadiums. Times, Sunday Times
  • A large new sports hall has been built to the east of the complex next to existing open-air sports facilities.
  • Our rooms opened out onto an open-air patio area with rooms along the opposite side too.
  • There are three vegetarian meals daily and two yoga classes plus an open-air swimming pool on site and a range of massage treatments available. Times, Sunday Times
  • A tincture is made (H.) from the whole plant with spirit of wine, and this proves most useful for clearing obscuration of the sight, when there is a sense, especially in the open-air, of a white vibrating mist before the eyes; and therefore it has been given with marked success in early stages of amaurotic paralysis of the retina. Herbal Simples Approved for Modern Uses of Cure
  • Similar, open-air cinema spaces created a sensational roofscape - with the whole ensemble poised over a stepped podium in sandstone.
  • There is also a large open-air amphitheatre. Times, Sunday Times
  • It also features a walled kitchen garden and an amphitheatre for open-air performances in the summer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, under right conditions, an open-air dogshow is a thing of beauty and of joy. Further Adventures of Lad
  • The open-air market is pumping an assortment of useless bric-a-brac out to its furthermost reaches.
  • The grounds used to house an open-air swimming pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • In 1576 actor James Burbage built London's first public theater, known simply as The Theatre, which was an open-air structure that combined features of pageant wagons, fixed stages, and banquet halls.
  • His activities are listed as preaching, open-air mission, medical treatment and education, together with building schools, a medical dispensary, a place of worship and a missionary house.
  • The Dukes Playhouse is presenting Grimm Tales as its annual open-air theatre event - an adaption by Carol Ann Duffy of folk stories collected by Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.
  • That's the open-air office, the egalitarian "bullpen" that Bloomberg, whose spare cubicle is no fancier than any of his underlings, brought to City Hall.
  • After a spine-crushing three hour journey from the small city of Coca in an open-air ranchero, a motorized canoe transported us 150 miles from civilization into the remotest bowels of the jungle. Suzan Crane: Finding my Soul and Losing my Heart in the Equadorian Amazon: A Spiritual Journey With the Remote Huaorani Tribe
  • This form, as we shall see, was the immediate outgrowth of the "laud," but one of its ancestors was the open-air performances. Some Forerunners of Italian Opera
  • Batman's Alley" is more than just a street—it's an open-air graffiti gallery in the heart of the bohemian Vila Madalena neighborhood. Sao Paulo: Brazilian Beauty
  • From the third floor up, guestrooms are arranged around an open-air poolside terrace, some of which have balconies for customers to get closer to the outside greenery.
  • Look out for open-air concerts and theatre performances throughout the open season. Times, Sunday Times
  • My parents have a vacation house in the East of France, and when they're there, they go shopping at the open-air market in Gerardmer, a pretty lakeside town nearby.
  • Soon they were all talking at once, rumbling and roaring as big - chested open-air men will, when whisky has whipped their taciturnity. Chapter 4
  • This practice is followed by the majority of paleoethnobotanists, especially when dealing with open-air sites in the Midwest.
  • I slipped on some white hemp soled espadrilles and went down to the open-air restaurant to get some food, because I was hungry.
  • The vivid memory of pundits chanting and amateur actors dressed in bright costumes performing on the open-air stage has stayed with me.
  • Clad in soft cotton kimonos and sandals, guests wander the flagstone walkways on their way to open-air hot tubs.
  • There is a fairyland for children at the Schlossplatz and an open-air ice-skating rink is set up in front of the castle.
  • The activist has been encamped in an open-air venue in New Delhi with thousands of supporters.
  • Some stopped to pray at the open-air altar, others walked slowly and quietly around marvelling at this little oasis of peace.
  • Coupled with a "dogtrot" design (a house divided down the middle by an open-air corridor, again to allow a breeze to flow through), these were methods of staying cool. FriendFeed - georgeh
  • A massive open-air amphitheater is a permanent fixture on the side of the Fortín hill which overlooks the north west quadrant of the city. Oaxaca, Mexico: a day in one of the New World's finest cities
  • The council has decided to roof over the open-air swimming pool.
  • In any case, Lucy's claims that she'd escaped detection for three years in cramped quarters occupied by 450 men, where the toilets were a couple of open-air perches at the ship's beakhead, and where the regulations of the day required all Marines to strip, bathe, and dress in the presence of a commanding officer responsible for checking frequently on their physical condition, were patently ridiculous. Countdown
  • And tonight the curtain will go up for the opening night of the open-air production in Blackpool's Stanley Park.
  • The council has decided to roof over the open-air swimming pool.
  • Hawaiians worshipped both in their homes and in open-air temples.
  • It has an open-air swimming pool, canoes, pedalos and a pirate ship ready to take families for a sail.
  • There was an open-air teahouse with picnic tables and young Japanese girls in kimonos who brought dainty teacups along with two pots of tea.
  • It made the job easier by defining one-third of it as Greater Jerusalem while expropriating Palestinian land to expand existing settlements, build new ones, add new roads for Jews only, and erect the Separation Wall falsely claimed for security to disguise its real land-grab purpose plus another way to cantonize Palestinians in isolated areas cut off from all others and effectively enclose them in large open-air prisons. A Review of The Ethnic Cleansing of Palestine by Ilan Pappe
  • There was an open-air shashlik bar on a low hill behind the not very up-to-date Turkmenistan Hotel. DESTROY THE KENTUCKY
  • To isolate harmful food, inspectors from 82 municipal laboratories armed with spectroscopes and radiation detectors comb the city's 69 open-air markets.
  • Her father took her camping in the Adirondacks one summer in the 1970s[Sentence dictionary], and behind the lean-to at their campsite in the middle of a seemingly pristine forest they discovered a small open-air dump.
  • A restaurant with an open-air bar, it's a place to sit amid warm wood hues and chattering groups of friends as you enjoy tasty sushi hand-rolls and a Mango and Cardamom Daiquiri , perhaps?
  • There's also a terrace with an open-air pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • On the other side is the open-air lounge, with a fully stocked bar and comfy Indonesian daybeds with plump throw pillows.
  • These are housed in an ancient open-air chamber of delicate, honey-coloured pillars, its crumbling walls darkened by the smoke of candles.
  • At night, the same movie was shown on an open-air screen on the ship's fantail for the troops. Happy Voyages, if Not
  • The great parvis for open-air worshippers recalls a Classical Greek theatre set in the landscape, with the man-made and natural worlds brought together in a powerful symbiosis.
  • Cultural activities range from tennis and sailing to film nights at the town hall and an annual open-air jazz concert. Times, Sunday Times
  • Before the march past, an open-air service of commemoration was held in Dean's Park in the grounds of York Minster, where the 2nd Division Memorial is sited.
  • Every one of the eight guest rooms has its own john and shower, and there's a raised open-air common kitchen and sitting room.
  • The beer festival was a huge open-air jamboree with music, stalls and everyone enjoying themselves.
  • Under these disclike roofs, the building is a chain of interconnected pavilions and outdoor terraces surrounding a large open-air courtyard, a layout that evokes caravanserais, shelters that were built along the old trade routes. NYT > Home Page
  • There are few beaches to but there is a swimming club with pools, and open-air concerts in the summer. Times, Sunday Times
  • The festival does not always pass off as the parents and adults expect, with some babies refusing to cry on the open-air stage at the Asakusa temple.
  • We passed what looked like three-sided open-air squash courts - frontons, he said, built by Basque settlers who wanted to play pelota in their new home.
  • We pick up some cigars and duty-free liquor, then wander through the open-air marketplace.
  • Another event that takes prominence in the social calendar of the residents is their annual open-air mass.
  • One exception to Palladio's minimalist approach is the Villa Barbaro, with a nymphaeum set against the hillside behind the villa and so close to the building that it seems an open-air extension of it.
  • In 2002, there was a spate of vandalism, including one incident in which damage put at £1, 000 was caused to the open-air lido.
  • Beyond this is an open-air courtyard with a waterfall and locust trees lit up in the dark.
  • Like the Scarborough lido, the Jubilee Pool is an open-air pool filled with unheated sea water and also forms part of the coastal defences.
  • Struck by Switters's persistence-he kept at it literally for hours-and delighted by his improvement-by late afternoon he was stilting with authority, if not exactly grace-Pippi beckoned him over to the roofed but open-air area at the rear of the storehouse where she maintained a small carpentry shop. Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates
  • Dividing the compounds is an open-air courtyard; along one side is a walkway lined with wood grilles that give a latticed feel and allows the light to filter in the pattern of stripes. A Blended Beach House
  • The hub of the American penal system's largest open-air Panopticon is in the Indianapolis suburb of Anderson, population 57,496, at the call center of a company called BI Incorporated.
  • Bulgaria welcomed 2003 with a blend of the modern and the traditional, with revellers jamming open-air concerts and mummers parading to ward off evil spirits.
  • Kamal was a vendor in Egypt's open-air bazaar.
  • It is hot and the fish are lying out on concrete tables in covered open-air areas. Smithsonian Insider
  • An open-air barbecue, disco, live band and bouncing castle for kiddies was laid on for the guests.
  • One open-air concert starring Robbie Williams attracted 370,000 people and caused gridlock for miles.
  • The guitar Dickie had bought at one of those nighttime open-air markets where twenty-dollar "Rolex" watches and ten-dollar "Gucci" loafers were sold, and to the untrained eye, it looked exactly like a dandy Martin D-28, right down to the herringbone purfling. Villa Incognito
  • And this collection again demonstrates the utterly deft and assured way Van Gogh manipulated the open-air space, with strangely tilted, compressed and foreshortened geometries of furrowed fields and garden rows rioting in color. In Philadelphia, Van Gogh's Nature Cure
  • There was no statutory duty upon councils to fund open-air swimming pools. Times, Sunday Times
  • Beyond, long hallways were being reframed into tiers of open-air balconies, through which 55 small rooms would face a central, palm-shaded atrium.
  • Batman's Alley" is more than just a street -- it's an open-air graffiti gallery in the heart of the bohemian Vila Madalena neighborhood. Sao Paolo: Pounding Heart of Brazil
  • Set in secluded landscaped gardens and surrounded by a golf course and a saltwater lagoon, this spa contains 108 villas, which come equipped with their own private garden, king-size bed and sunken open-air bath.
  • Some revelers wore straw sombreros and stick-on mustaches, poking fun at a national stereotype, while the government sought to promote a more serious side with an open-air philharmonic orchestra.
  • Both would have gone down well at an open-air festival. Times, Sunday Times
  • Oxygen consumption, an estimation of the rate of metabolism, was measured in bats submitted to different ambient temperatures, under dim light, using an open-air flow respirometer.
  • The beautifully constructed open-air dining hall sits right on the beach next door to a game room housing a billiard table and video games for the kids.
  • It was his use of bright colours with sketchy brushwork that gave his paintings a feeling of the open-air landscape, directly captured with each stroke for an unending moment.
  • The complex will eventually have a gym, a pool and Martini pool set in a garden in an inner courtyard, a laundry, and an open-air Japanese teriyaki grill where tenants can order a breakfast from the kitchen any morning of the week.
  • He caught a chill while performing at a rain-soaked open-air venue.
  • A drop-dead-gorgeous crowd was tangoing away in a makeshift, open-air amphitheater.
  • For an open-air concert venue, this seems to be a serious oversight. Times, Sunday Times
  • The challenge there is that you can't take the hardtop with you in case it rains and conversely, if the weather's great you have to leave the hardtop somewhere to enjoy open-air motoring.
  • Identify any dishes you must try - a porchetta sandwich at the open-air market - and any you may want to avoid.
  • In summer, a car park becomes an open-air cinema. Times, Sunday Times
  • As Victor stalks Rose, however, he's amused by her insouciant thievery in an open-air market and, even if he doesn't know it, beguiled by her beauty. Marshall Fine: HuffPost Review: Wild Target
  • Opera fans come from all over the country to see open-air performances in a unique setting.
  • The council has decided to roof over the open-air swimming pool.
  • Other attractions include an open-air theatre, an aquarium, a zoo, a planetarium, a bizarre little naval museum and a slightly overblown Monument to the Fighters against Fascism.
  • The lessons you learn from sketching these effects may be invaluable for open-air work. Learn to Draw Countryside
  • The open-air-stage in one of the roads in Pykara was no impediment to the passers-by who turned onlookers after the tear-jerking tale of ‘Kalyani’ shook them, especially the women segment.
  • Rooms are spacious and the massive open-air restaurant serves amazing food. The Sun
  • And that's how we ended up in Etosha, Namibia's biggest open-air butchery.
  • For the romantic these are the hills of home, scattered with Munros and sufficiently unpeopled to turn a day's ridge-walk into an adventure, an open-air playground with soaring eagles and far-off deer for company.
  • Cheaper, open-air theatres staged plays openly critical of the court. The English Civil War: A People's History
  • Out on the circle of sand, a vast open-air theatre, still strut the men in their black winged caps, their neat black slippers, their sparkly traje de luces ( "suit of lights"), tighter on their taut bodies than seems either plausible or advisable, and their thick capes of DayGlo violet on one side and canary-yellow on the other. Why bullfighting is making Spain see red
  • Big sleek black Nonius horses - another speciality of the Hortobágy - were stamping and whickering to each other as we wandered around the open-air market on the puszta near the village.
  • The beer festival was a huge open-air jamboree with music, stalls and everyone enjoying themselves.
  • The Forum Baths, which adjoin the temple precinct, are largely traditional in layout, comprising a cold room and two hot rooms (sudatorium, caldarium), plus an open-air pool with a sunbathing facility (solarium).
  • We passed what looked like three-sided open-air squash courts - frontons, Fernando said, built by Basque settlers who wanted to play pelota in their new home.
  • The council has decided to roof over the open-air swimming pool.
  • It is hot and the fish are lying out on concrete tables in covered open-air areas. Smithsonian Insider
  • It provides a relaxing atmosphere with calming treatment rooms and an open-air whirlpool bath that is ideal for a romantic couple's massage. Times, Sunday Times
  • Over the two day period there will be lots of entertainment, sports, dancing, music, and the festival will end with a gigantic open-air céilí.
  • There was one of us being reunited, another of us walking through an open-air market, and the final of us on the beach, posing in some goofy position.
  • In 1948 the Sordello family started selling pan bagnat nicoise tuna sandwiches from two tables under an awning, and quickly became a little open-air café in Cap d'Antibes on the Cote d'Azur, and then a world-famous eatery there. Jay Weston: Authentic Bouillabaisse on Bastille Day at South Coast Plaza
  • Alongside are rustically designed huts and an open-air auditorium.
  • We have tried to avoid repeating the formula of the ubiquitous open-air sculpture exhibition.
  • Watch the sun set from the beach bar and eat dinner at the open-air restaurant. Times, Sunday Times
  • He undressed in the men's restroom and, barefoot, crossed a huge open-air dance hall to reach the club's U-shaped jetty. OUTCAST
  • They lived in open-air houses that wound around trees.
  • He will hold an open-air mass in the capital Yaounde and he'll outline the program for a Synod on Africa to be held later this year. Our religious affairs correspondent Christopher Landau reports.
  • Leogang also has a super leisure and fitness centre, with a heated open-air swimming pool.
  • If you're lucky, you can catch the odd open-air concert in the harbourside area to the south: Polish folk music or tambourinists from Burkhina Faso.
  • The luxury pad has an infinity pool, open-air film screen and a spa. The Sun
  • The concert was noteworthy in that it took place in a giant open-air barn for milk cows the fazenda produces some of the highest quality milk in Brazil. Chris McGowan: Brazil's Coffee Valley Music Festival Draws Crowds to Historic Region
  • Alternatively, take a seat at one of the open-air pavement cafés for a cool beer and perhaps try a nargileh, the hubble-bubble pipe so popular in this part of the world.
  • Centenary Square, for example, would be an ideal place for regular themed open-air markets.
  • On Hampstead Heath the Corporation of London is considering the closure of the open-air bathing ponds which have succoured swimmers, amputees and mild exhibitionists since the 1860s.
  • In the open-air hot spring zone, there are the drifting stream flowing all around the facilities, the huge ocean wave pool, the exotic artificial sand beach, and the snug and romantic wooden hut.
  • Around ten thousand ravers were expected to attend the open-air party.
  • There's also an open-air cinema on the beach that plays old classics. Times, Sunday Times
  • Or take a leisurely open-air gondola to float over the greenery and gawp at the views. The Sun
  • There is to be a live satellite link-up with them and New York firefighters as part of an open-air ceremony in Birmingham's Victoria Square.
  • The atmosphere in Gurazada open-air auditorium at Siripuram junction warmed up on a chilly evening with hot numbers.
  • As the birds twitter in the winter air at dawn, a burly Iraqi grandmother in black makes bread in an open-air oven for an extended family of 20.
  • The beer festival was a huge open-air jamboree with music, stalls and everyone enjoying themselves.
  • I recall the day he chucked a lump of calcium oxide into the open-air swimming pool. Times, Sunday Times
  • A stunning composition of parallel horizontals formed by the open-air stone steps of Adalaj, India, are vertically counterpointed with a tall pillar in the right foreground. A Long Path to a Belated Introduction
  • Deep in the quiet art kingdom, visitors may be summoned by the loud sound of beating gongs and drums to an open-air stage, where local artists perform the drum dance.
  • You may find it impossible to buy or rent a building for your congregation's worship services, or even to conduct an open-air revival meeting.
  • We'd go to nightclubs and cafés, hear jazz bands play or go to open-air symphonies.
  • Its waste, up to ten pounds per day, drops through the slats where it collects before being periodically pumped into open-air cesspools.
  • For days, demonstrators trickled into Lima aboard trucks and buses from the Andes, the jungle and the Pacific coast, sleeping in open-air tent camps and eating from communal stewpots.
  • It also features a walled kitchen garden and an amphitheatre for open-air performances in the summer. Times, Sunday Times
  • Indoor pools exist, and Moscow boasts a year-round, heated open-air affair between the Kremlin and the Defence Ministry.
  • Its narrow streets and squares resonate with the songs of the gondolieri and chatter coming from open-air cafes.
  • Apart from the bookshops, they can be found on numerous unattended open-air bookstalls, exposed to the elements: sun-beaten and often soaked with rainwater.
  • The beer festival was a huge open-air jamboree with music, stalls and everyone enjoying themselves.
  • An Indian authority cited four and a half quintal (four hundredweight) of wood for an open-air cremation.
  • Common problems include drones being used to deliver drugs, mobile phones and food to prisoners and to capture footage of football matches and concerts from open-air stadiums. Times, Sunday Times
  • (simple open-air eateries) and mobile food carts called kaki lima, which literally translates as "five feet" -- it refers to the sum of the vendor's two feet and the cart's three (two wheels in the front and one supporting leg in the rear). The Dish: Gado-Gado
  • The city passed an ordinance that regulated open-air roasting and stipulated the use of stepped-up technology to abate the pollution.
  • We swam in an open-air pool with Russians of all shapes and sizes. Times, Sunday Times
  • The modern-day Globe is located on the south bank of the River Thames a stone's throw from where the original theater used to exist and is built to similar specifications with an open-air stage, standing room in front of the stage for inexpensive "groundling" tickets and a thatched roof over the galleries for those willing to pay more for a seat. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • But in the meantime, there is the new open-air theatre to enjoy. Times, Sunday Times
  • The same period also saw the creation of dance studies — composed of light, line and movement — of the major exponents of Expressionist dance (Gret Palucca [1902 – 1993] and Mary Wigman [1886 – 1973]); the Constructivist-inspired role portraits of the Moscow Chamber Theater (1925) and the Habimah Ensemble (1927); and their close-grained, New Expressionist stage reportage of important productions and significant open-air theater performances (Heidelberg Castle Theater Festival, Frankfurt-Römerberg Theater Festival). Nini Hess.
  • Another wing contains cellular rooms around an internal open-air courtyard for the Sukka festival.
  • an open-air theater
  • He says, in fact, that Edmonton is the penultimate stop on his farewell tour as an open-air artiste.
  • Apparently the key is to lie crosswise not lengthwise, so nights have been much more comfortable, even if I am perched 20 feet high in an open-air tree house.
  • On Hampstead Heath the Corporation of London is considering the closure of the open-air bathing ponds which have succoured swimmers, amputees and mild exhibitionists since the 1860s.
  • To develop and produce the latest model, high performance, low, open-air pit for various models of drilling machinery, while the supply of accessories.
  • People flocked to the baths and open-air swimming pools, and at the Lido in Bradford's Lister Park the attendance was 2,871.
  • If you are single, you find your ideal partner when you go to an open-air music concert. The Sun
  • She led the way down the passageway to a sponson, an open-air enclosed area low on the ship. Hellfire
  • Services here are several times cheaper than in Nablus, and as the checkpoints had been closed, it is the best alternative for those who can still afford the luxuries of preening themselves but can't reason with the soldiers to wiggle their way out of their open-air prison of a village. Thursdays with my sisters
  • Or take a leisurely open-air gondola to float over the greenery and gawp at the views. The Sun
  • If it's sunny, there's nothing finer than grabbing a pint at one of the many open-air pubs on the esplanade and watching the world go by.
  • It's well known to the industry but Sheffield's annual non-fiction knees-up is making the most of its new June slot to find ways to reach out to the public – like next week's free open-air screenings on Devonshire Green, graced by special guest Albert Maysles, who'll introduce his legendary Grey Gardens. This week's new film events
  • The central open-air market is the heart of the city, pumping an assortment of useless bric-a-brac and expensive marionettes out to its furthermost reaches, and generally keeping the tourist cash flowing.
  • Also, while streetcars were typically open-air affairs, most interurbans were either fully enclosed, partially enclosed, or convertible.
  • Shui Xiang translates as 'water village' and the expansive 3,132 square meter (33,713 sq ft) spa has been created in traditional open-air hutong (Chinese courtyard residences separated by narrow alleyways) style, with 13 individual spa 'houses' circling a central water feature. StreetInsider.com News Articles
  • There is also a large open-air amphitheatre. Times, Sunday Times
  • The lessons you learn from sketching these effects may be invaluable for open-air work. Learn to Draw Countryside
  • New rolling stock means panoramic windows plus open-air viewing carriages to bring the passing landscape closer. Times, Sunday Times
  • We pick up some cigars and duty-free liquor, then wander through the open-air marketplace.
  • In Thailand, open-air markets sell silkworms, grasshoppers, and water bugs by the pound.
  • At the top of the building, the glass roof of the children's shower can be opened at the touch of a switch for open-air ablutions or access to a rooftop terrace.
  • Its reception area is a palapa, a huge, open-air structure roofed with dried palm fronds.
  • Open-air exercise undoubtedly have lengthened the old man's life.
  • In this open-air society, it is the rag-picker who salutes and the portress who patronizes. Les Miserables
  • The history of playing from 1610 to the closure of 1642 is one of gradual bifurcation into two traditions centred on two types of venue: the open-air amphitheatres and the indoor hall playhouses.
  • Around ten thousand ravers were expected to attend the open-air party.
  • Some complained of logistical hitches and lengthy delays but the process appeared peaceful, although it was disrupted at some open-air voting centres by heavy downpours. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is an open-air museum of superb bronzes, who, when they condescend to clothe themselves at all, drape in statuesque folds about their brown limbs and bodies a few yards of white or crimson cloth, which adorns rather than conceals. In Seven Stages: A Flying Trip Around the World
  • Indoor pools exist, and Moscow boasts a year-round, heated open-air affair between the Kremlin and the Defence Ministry.
  • Open-air cinema screens could add variety to diversion and bankside pool halls would not come amiss. Times, Sunday Times
  • Hassane and most of the competitors sheepishly made their way over to El Hadji's open-air mosque to perform their ablutions and prayers.
  • It is hot and the fish are lying out on concrete tables in covered open-air areas. Smithsonian Insider
  • This drained some of the waste liquid out of the pond, from where it was transported by more open-air ditches to a local river, then to the sacred Narmada River, and eventually to the Gulf of Cambay now known as the Gulf of Khambhat where the local fishermen fished. THE STORY OF STUFF
  • Some complained of logistical hitches and lengthy delays but the process appeared peaceful, although it was disrupted at some open-air voting centres by heavy downpours. Times, Sunday Times
  • Our renewed love affair with open-air motoring coincided with the explosion in pretty two-seat roadsters.
  • Whether the workplace is a cave, an open-air market, a desert caravan, a pushcart or a high-tech company, the principles are the same.
  • An open-air debate with Solomon Pappiya as the moderator, near bus stands and public places in rural areas, is meant to target the floating population.
  • This classic tale of star-crossed lovers is performed in the open-air with the magnificent backdrop of Titchfield Abbey.
  • Clad in soft cotton kimonos and sandals, guests wander the flagstone walkways on their way to open-air hot tubs.
  • They marked the occasion with an open-air concert.

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