Visitors today can keep watch over the scene in the booth at the end of the bar that Capone and his cronies once occupied.
The Bars That Made America Great|Nina Strochlic|December 28, 2014|DAILY BEAST
“We have undercover security,” says Vincent Zurzolo, the suave man in the blue suit in booth 2630 of New York Comic Con.
The Holy Grail of Comic Books Hid in Plain Site at New York Comic Con|Sujay Kumar|October 14, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Daft Punk amplified the crowd in a way that changed my life and they never even left the booth.
DJ Steve Aoki: To Cake or Not To Cake|Steve Aoki|August 8, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Once inside the school cafeteria, which served as an antechamber, each candidate had his own booth.
The Bizarro World Of Iowa’s GOP Convention|Ben Jacobs|June 23, 2014|DAILY BEAST
On the first afternoon of the three-day confab, as guests are still strolling in, the booth already has attracted a crowd.
Fear and Loathing at the Republican Leadership Conference|David Freedlander|June 3, 2014|DAILY BEAST
A poor widow, in a small town in the north of England, kept a booth or stall of apples and sweetmeats.
The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction|Various
Tomorrow she and Fritz intended to slip away from their booth in the market place.
Mitz and Fritz of Germany|Madeline Brandeis
He grasped Brad by the shoulder, pulling him half-way out of the booth.
Dan Carter and the River Camp|Mildred A. Wirt
"He is one sure singing bird," said another sub, a stout, overgrown boy by the name of Booth.
The Sky Pilot in No Man's Land|Ralph Connor
Booth was then satisfied that Mr. Robinson, whom he did not yet know by name, was the gamester who had won his money at play.
Amelia|Henry Fielding
British Dictionary definitions for booth (1 of 2)
booth
/ (buːð, buːθ) /
nounpluralbooths (buːðz)
a stall for the display or sale of goods, esp a temporary one at a fair or market
a small enclosed or partially enclosed room or cubicle, such as one containing a telephone (telephone booth) or one in which a person casts his or her vote at an election (polling booth)
two long high-backed benches with a long table between, used esp in bars and inexpensive restaurants
(formerly) a temporary structure for shelter, dwelling, storage, etc
Word Origin for booth
C12: of Scandinavian origin; compare Old Norse buth, Swedish, Danish bod shop, stall; see bower1
British Dictionary definitions for booth (2 of 2)
Booth
/ (buːð) /
noun
Edwin Thomas, son of Junius Brutus Booth. 1833–93, US actor
John Wilkes, son of Junius Brutus Booth. 1838–65, US actor; assassin of Abraham Lincoln
Junius Brutus (ˈdʒuːnɪəs ˈbruːtəs). 1796–1852, US actor, born in England
William . 1829–1912, British religious leader; founder and first general of the Salvation Army (1878)