parlor
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L325072 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈpɑːlə/ / /ˈpɑɹlɚ/ / /ˈpaːlɔː/
noun
Etymology: Inherited from Middle English parlour, from Old French parleor, parloir, parleoir, from the verb parler (“to speak”); compare Medieval Latin parlātōrium. Doublet of parloir.
- The living room of a house, or a room for entertaining guests; a room for talking; a sitting-room or drawing room.
“So, after a spell, he decided to make the best of it and shoved us into the front parlor. 'Twas a dismal sort of place, with hair wreaths, and wax fruit, and tin lambrekins, and land knows what all.”
- The apartment in a monastery or nunnery where the residents are permitted to meet and converse with each other or with visitors from the outside.
- A comfortable room in a public house.
“Immediately at hand was a small, mean public-house - one of those dingy establishments that seem to express, by their morbid and retiring appearance, a certain anxiety to escape the eye of the police - and into the parlour of this hostel Quin promptly led the way.”
“There had been a surprise party and some had entered his hotel parlour to get drink; before he was aware of it the accordion was being played in the room.”
- A covered open-air patio.
- A shop or other business selling goods or services specified by context.
“tattoo parlor pizza parlor ice cream parlor”
- A shop or other business selling goods or services specified by context.
- A shed used for milking cattle; a milking parlor.