¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Passageways
1. passageway [n] - See also: passageway
Literary usage of Passageways
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Art Principles in House, Furniture, and Village Building: An Exposition of by Arthur Bridgman Clark (1921)
"This principle is as important as the principle of passageways, but it must not
be over- practiced, or rooms will become crisscrossed with passage routes. ..."
2. Building Code ...: 1914-1927 by Industrial Commission of Wisconsin (1914)
"Passageways and Foyers. Passageways and foyers shall be of width required under
... Passageways and foyers which serve as means of egress (whether usual or ..."
3. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"... when and in the space between the shells furnished room models for the reliefs
of the second bronze door of for ribbing, passageways, and stairs. ..."
4. The Law of Personal Injuries in Mines: Including All Character of Personal by Edward Joseph White (1905)
"To whom the duty as to a reasonably safe place applies. 43. Illustrations of
unsafe places in mines. 44. Owner should provide reasonably safe passageways. ..."
5. Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms by Frederic Sturges Allen (1920)
"Referring to the relation of places joined by passageways, etc.: connection,
intercommunication. communicative, a. communicatory, communicable, ..."
6. Handbook for Architects and Builders by Illinois society of architects (1908)
"The width of such passageways shall be increased twelve (12) inches for each ...
If one or more fireproof passageways are required on one side of the stage ..."
7. Lectures, Illustrated and Embellished with Views of the World's Famous by John Lawson Stoddard (1898)
"... being some seventy feet in height and two hundred in breadth, and perforated
by five different passageways, the central one being reserved for carriages ..."
8. John L. Stoddard's Lectures by John Lawson Stoddard (1898)
"It is in truth imposing, being some seventy feet in height and two hundred in
breadth, and perforated by five different passageways, the central one being ..."