释义 |
par·lor I. \ˈpärlər, ˈpȧlə(r\ noun (-s) Usage: see -or Etymology: Middle English parlour, from Old French parleor, parlour parlor, reception room in a convent, from parler to speak, talk — more at parley 1. : a room used primarily for conversation or the reception of guests: as a. : an apartment in a monastery or nunnery where the monastics are permitted to meet and converse with each other or with visitors b. : a room in a private dwelling kept chiefly for the reception of visitors rather than for family use and usually better furnished than the other rooms in the dwelling — compare living room 1, sitting room c. : a room in a large dwelling (as a mansion) or in a public building (as a city hall) used as a conference chamber or private reception room d. : a room in a public building (as an inn, tavern, hotel, club) designed for conversation, rest, or semiprivacy e. : one of a suite of rooms (as in a club or hotel) devoted to the general reception of members or guests < the parlors of the hotels were lavishly furnished — D.D.Martin > — usually used in plural < the annual Christmas supper … will be held Monday night in the church parlors — Hartford (Conn.) Courant > 2. archaic : dining room 3. : something held to resemble an inner or special chamber < the parlor of his heart — George Macdonald †1905 > 4. : a business establishment usually devoted to a specified service or to the sale of a specified item < funeral parlor > < beauty parlor > < beer parlor > < ice-cream parlor > II. adjective Usage: see -or 1. : used in or suitable for a parlor < heard the parlor clock strike twelve — Helen Eustis > < parlor trick > < a … young woman with a parlor voice — Douglas Watt > < parlor furniture > 2. a. : fostered or advocated in comfortable seclusion without consequent action or application to affairs < parlor bolshevism > b. : given to or characterized by fostering or advocating something (as a doctrine) in such a manner < parlor pink > < parlor socialist > |