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tearoom

[ UK /tˈe‍əɹuːm/ ]
NOUN
  1. a restaurant where tea and light meals are available

How To Use tearoom In A Sentence

  • Nelson's already much talked-about installation, which opens to the public this Saturday, takes the visitor through the front door of the elegant, colonnaded 19th-century former tearoom that forms Britain's official pavilion and plunges them into a disorienting, dusty, crepuscular world full of labyrinthine passages, false walls and shoulder-hunchingly low ceilings. UK Venice Biennale entry 'avoids Britishness'
  • She played in the Driskill Hotel's tearoom, which is small but very fancy, and everyone sat on the floor and paid rapt attention. Chicago Reader
  • It was lined with buildings made of grayish-orange Cotswold limestone, tourist facilities mostly - china shops, map stores, tearooms. BABYCAKES
  • She had not given up the fight to transform the tearooms to an alternative health centre and was hopeful of instituting a Pilates class. MR GOLIGHTLY'S HOLIDAY
  • Today, the tearoom is a time-capsule of the Victorian age. Melbourne
  • The opening of the tearooms will see a relaunch of the project to bring the station back to life.
  • We entered off an arcade and the tearoom had no outside window, but lots of lights which lit up the very dark timbered walls.
  • Asquith's is the perfect place for peckish arctophiles, because downstairs from the tearooms is a charming teddy bear shop.
  • Today, I'm told, the people of Basra whisper and mumble about the intifada, but only among family members at home or in tearooms with their most intimate friends.
  • Bolton-by-Bowland Post Office opened a tearoom as a sideline to subsidise the existing operation.
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