smoking-room

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See also: smoking room

English

Noun

smoking-room (plural smoking-rooms)

  1. Dated form of smoking room.
    • 1845, B[enjamin] Disraeli, chapter III, in Sybil; or The Two Nations. , volume II, London: Henry Colburn, , →OCLC, book IV, page 166:
      The division bell was still ringing; peers and diplomatists and strangers were turned out; members came rushing in from library and smoking-room; some desperate cabs just arrived in time to land their passengers in the waiting-room.
    • 1882, Chums: A Tale of the Queen's Navy, volume 1, page 200:
      To the "Nut" then, with its dirty little smoking-room, clouded with fumes arising from baccies of every description; curling upwards from the short black Irish clay bowl, full of strong ship's baccy, as well as from the best of Havannahs []
    • 1887, Hawley Smart, A False Start, volume 2, page 69:
      “It's a rum start, old John Madingley's coming down to Tunnleton,” said Grafton, one evening in the smoking-room; []
    • 1891 [1887], Oscar Wilde, “The Model Millionaire”, in Lord Arthur Savile's Crime and Other Stories:
      That night he strolled into the Palette Club about eleven o’clock, and found Trevor sitting by himself in the smoking-room drinking hock and seltzer.
    • 1897, Edith Wharton, Ogden Codman Jr., “The Library, Smoking-room, and “Den””, in The Decoration of Houses, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, →OCLC, page 151:
      The smoking-room proper, with its mise en scène of Turkish divans, narghilehs, brass coffee-trays, and other Oriental properties, is no longer considered a necessity in the modern house; []
    • 1924 July, John Buchan, “Our Time is Narrowed”, in The Three Hostages, London: Hodder & Stoughton, published January 1926, →OCLC, page 227:
      I dined alone and sat after dinner in the smoking-room, for Odell never suggested the library, though I would have given a lot to fossick about that place.
    • 1932, Alec Waugh, That American Woman, page 20:
      He saw marriage as a settling down to the serious business of life; a settling down that was symbolized in the large stuccoed house in St John's Wood Park, with its long mahogany dining-table, its family portraits, its oak-panelled smoking-room, its leather-bound books running in long, dusty rows from floor to ceiling; its drawing-room whose heavily brocaded windows looked out on a trim garden, its thick carpets, its kitchened basement, its high, wide bedrooms, its airy nursery.
    • 1972, To-day - Volumes 5-7, page 15:
      The most chairful of chairs are to be found in the smoking-rooms of clubs.