Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
parlor .
Etymologies
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Examples
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In it, he explains that he has not issued a blanket ruling about the free-spin parlors, one way or the other.
Are Internet gaming cafes illegal? Maybe, maybe not, Cuccinelli says Rosalind Helderman 2010
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Maybe the reason we don't hear about pretty statues and, I don't know, milkshake parlors, is that the newsworthiness of such things pales when compared with the deaths of 20-30 soldiers and Iraqi civilians a day.
fun with politics alladinsane 2005
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Appeals were sent throughout the State, gatherings were held in parlors, and enthusiastic meetings in Cooper Institute and the Savoy Hotel.
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Her parlors were the rendezvous of eminent men, and men destined to become eminent.
Brave Men and Women Fuller, O E 1884
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Her parlors were the rendezvous of eminent men, and men destined to become eminent.
Brave Men and Women Their Struggles, Failures, And Triumphs 1867
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The parlors are the last two rooms on the first floor.
The Petch House 2010
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Observing even just from US, numerous Chinese mail-order bride websites, numerous Chinese "massage parlors" all are cognizant of what these "parlors" really are, numerous US sweatshops all are typical of too numerous female population.
32 million extra males. Ann Althouse 2009
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Many "parlors" never expect to see the same person twice, because they do not make him comfortable or gain his confidence; they put a filling in on top of decayed matter or even diseased pulp; put in plates and bridges that do not fit; charge more than the examination at first leads one to expect; refuse to correct mistakes; deny having ever seen the patient before.
Civics and Health William H. Allen
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They sat through the next dance, and through half the next, hidden in one of the many diminutive "parlors" that surrounded the ball-room, and when Susan was surrendered to an outraged partner she felt that she and the great man were fairly started toward a real friendship, and that these attractive boys she was dancing with were really very young, after all.
Saturday's Child Kathleen Thompson Norris 1923
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Before twenty-four hours had passed, the last cherished fragment of Mr. William Henshaw's possessions had been carefully carried down the imposing steps of the Beacon Hill boarding-house under the disapproving eyes of its bugle-adorned mistress, who found herself now with a month's advance rent and two vacant "parlors" on her hands.
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