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Definition of Back entrance
1. Noun. An entrance at the rear of a building.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Back Entrance
Literary usage of Back entrance
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Friends' Library: Comprising Journals, Doctrinal Treatises, and Other by William Evans, Thomas Evans (1839)
"... our arrival at a back entrance of the palace, my guide left me in the carriage,
where I was kept waiting a considerable time, I concluded from our being ..."
2. The Weekly Reporter by Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords, Great Britain. Privy Council, Great Britain. Supreme Court of Judicature (1904)
"This back entrance gave access to the premises from a public passage leading out
of a back street. Immediately inside the entrance was a passage leading to ..."
3. Trial of Charles B. Huntington for Forgery: Principal Defence, Insanity by Charles B. Huntington, Chandler Robbins Gilman, James Topham Brady, John Alexander Bryan (1857)
"... Q. Did the fitting up of that back entrance have any reference to Charles B.
Huntington's business with Mr. Harbeck? ..."
4. Reports of Cases Heard and Determined by the Lord Chancellor and the Court by John Peter De Gex, Henry Cadman Jones, Great Britain Court of Chancery, Richard Horton Smith, Jonathan Cogswell Perkins (1874)
"What is meant by preserving the back entrance ? If it be slightly contracted,
still, however, remaining sufficient for every purpose of a back ..."
5. The Gardener's Magazine and Register of Rural and Domestic Improvement by J C Loudon (1838)
"0, Under gardener's room. p, back entrance to the stable-yard. ... 3, back entrance
to the flower-garden. 4, Pavement under the veranda. ..."
6. Reports of All the Cases Decided by All the Superior Courts Relating to by Edward William Cox, Great BRitain Magistrates' cases (1907)
"dealt with the back entrance to the premises there in question. In that case
there was but one entrance in question, a back entrance, and it was ordered ..."
7. The Villa Gardener: Comprising the Choice of a Suburban Villa Residence; the by John Claudius Loudon (1850)
"back entrance to the stable-yard. q. Soil yard. rr, Back shed and other ...
3, back entrance to the flower-garden. 4, Pavement under the veranda. ..."