[
US
/ˈɹum/
]
[ UK /ɹˈuːm/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈuːm/ ]
NOUN
-
opportunity for
room for improvement -
the people who are present in a room
the whole room was cheering -
an area within a building enclosed by walls and floor and ceiling
the rooms were very small but they had a nice view -
space for movement
make way for
hardly enough elbow room to turn around
room to pass
VERB
-
live and take one's meals at or in
she rooms in an old boarding house
How To Use room In A Sentence
- Ask for an aged standing rib roast from the forequarter, trimmed and chined; bring to room temperature before roasting.
- He pulled himself up and stumbled to the bathroom, where he turned on the cold tap and collapsed at the bottom of the shower, barely awake.
- Twenty microliters of each antibody was added to 100 L of blood, and the mixture was incubated at room temperature for 15 minutes.
- So it's a little more than passing strange that Mr. Brooks clucks about Mr. Obama's "über-partisan budget" when, given the last few weeks of shrieking and wailing from the Republicans about socialism and communism, he's been the voice of moderation in the room. Moderately Shocked
- Think roast partridge with wild mushrooms followed by a little pot of chocolate rosemary.
- a little dining room.
- I'm sat in one of those chairs with a little side table to rest your notebook on, arranged in a semicircle in a darkened room.
- A few plum accents can bring in a note of elegance to any room; try a throw pillow or two, or a plum lampshade with a fringe?
- There is probably room for a touch more earthiness, a little more hardness in her approach to a Don José who is always going to be putty in her hands.
- But in a world where grooming students for a career and making the arts responsive to business are key government priorities, a little artistic vision goes a long way.