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- word usage - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
Reception Reception area - Similar to lobby, a reception area is the part of a public building where you can find an information desk or assistance A reception area is usually not a room, but a portion of a lobby, foyer, or maybe vestibule
- single word requests - Area of the body between legs and genitals . . .
Here is an image in which the area is marked in green: (NSFW, genitals covered) Please note how the 'string' of the taut adductor muscles separates the groin on the front side of the trunk from the area in question on the trunk's underside The image shows a female body and the perineum is invisible below the genitalia in the shadow between the buttocks (Image source -NSFW, explicit)
- word request - What do you call the area in which they put furniture in . . .
As noted in the answers, "showroom" is the commonly used phrase But "display area" is probably the best literal description of what it is
- What do you call the covered area of the drive-through at a bank? Not . . .
The drive-through area that has a solid roof over it and not just an awning or canopy extruding from the side of the building Typically seen at bank branches that have more than one drive-up teller
- What is the join between the neck and the chin called, is it called . . .
The soft area between the hard edges of the chin bone and the throat proper might be described as 'under the chin' I have never heard it called the crook of my head neck A more accurate, medical term might be the digastric site, but that would not be understood in every day speech
- When someone pointing at a place spot area and you fail to see that . . .
A journalist visits a family who have been living in a caravan for a long time So, he tries to find out how they live and he also talks to the kids about life on caravan The kid shows him inside
- single word requests - What is the name of the area of skin between the . . .
What is the name of the area that is between the nose and the upper lip, circled in figure 1 below? source of face image I have found that the area circled in figure 2, the small indentation under
- american english - What would you call these interior balconies . . .
The term is often used in theatres where you have a higher seating or standing area running around the wall above the main space (stalls or atrium) - Wikipedia) In general use, the difference between a balcony and a gallery isn't hard and fast, but a gallery will tend to be longer An atrium is a large space covering multiple stories in a
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