hall

pronunciation

How to pronounce hall in British English: UK [hɔːl]word uk audio image

How to pronounce hall in American English: US [hɔːl] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    an interior passage or corridor onto which rooms open
    a large entrance or reception room or area
    a large room for gatherings or entertainment
    a college or university building containing living quarters for students
    the large room of a manor or castle
    a large and imposing house
    a large building used by a college or university for teaching or research
    a large building for meetings or entertainment

Word Origin

hall
hall: [OE] Etymologically, a hall is a ‘roofed or covered place’. Its ultimate ancestor was prehistoric West and North Germanic *khallō, a derivative of *khal-, *khel- ‘cover, hide’ (a slightly different derivative produced English hell, and cell, clandestine, conceal, hull ‘pod’, and possibly colour and holster are all relatives, close or distant).It retained much of its original meaning in Old English heall, which denoted simply a ‘large place covered by a roof’. This gradually became specialized to, on the one hand, ‘large residence’, and on the other, ‘large public room’. The main current sense, ‘entrance corridor’, dates from the 17th century (it derives from the fact that in former times the principal room of a house usually opened directly off the front door).=> cell, clandestine, conceal, hell, hull
hall (n.)
Old English heall "spacious roofed residence, house; temple; law-court," any large place covered by a roof, from Proto-Germanic *hallo "covered place, hall" (cognates: Old Saxon, Old High German halla, German halle, Dutch hal, Old Norse höll "hall;" Old English hell, Gothic halja "hell"), from PIE root *kel- (2) "to hide, cover, conceal" (see cell). Sense of "passageway in a building" evolved 17c., from the time when the doors to private rooms opened onto the large public room of the house. Older sense preserved in town hall, music hall, etc., in use of the word in Britain and Southern U.S. for "manor house," also "main building of a college" (late 14c.). French halle, Italian alla are from Middle High German. Hall of fame attested by 1786 as an abstract concept; in sporting sense first attested 1901, in reference to Columbia College; the Baseball Hall of Fame opened in 1939. Related: Hall-of-famer.

Example

1. The batty old woman across the hall had died .
2. Evidently , conway hall was made just for her .
3. Political leaders visited and feasted them for celebration in the great hall of the people .
4. Everybody knows the old joke : how do you get to carnegie hall ?
5. The daffodils lay on the hall table .

more: >How to Use "hall" with Example Sentences