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[ US /ˈɹum/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈuːm/ ]
NOUN
  1. opportunity for
    room for improvement
  2. the people who are present in a room
    the whole room was cheering
  3. an area within a building enclosed by walls and floor and ceiling
    the rooms were very small but they had a nice view
  4. space for movement
    make way for
    hardly enough elbow room to turn around
    room to pass
VERB
  1. 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.
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