Sentences with phrase «crowded halls»

The phrase "crowded halls" means a space or area that is filled with a lot of people, making it busy and full. Full definition
About 1,200 educators crowded the halls of the Omni Shoreham Hotel here last week for the third annual Safe and Drug - Free Schools Conference, amid concerns over a perceived recent increase in violent incidents in or near schools.
Which is why a number of liberal activists took to crowding the halls outside Gov. Andrew Cuomo's chambers Thursday, leading state troopers to arrest, eventually, 56 of them.
That means that those visiting the crowded halls won't have to worry about getting run down.
His usual half smile has given way to a grimmer expression, and he charges down the crowded hall with his staffers in tow.
When he was only 5 there was a visiting prophet in a crowded hall who called him out for a prophetic word.
A 45 - minute drive away, in the crowded halls of the state Capitol, where lawmakers are looking to wrap up this year's legislative session, those concerns may as well be happening on another planet.
Like most teenagers, they find the upper grades to be a bit challenging — especially since they are only eight inches tall and forced to navigate the crowded halls between classes.
Having his trust permitted me to travel the crowded halls of Cheyenne Central High School, past the walls of the classroom to focus on the moments and details of his life.
He had been silent and inward then, remote across the crowded hall.
In a crowded hall, exit doors are small,» it said in a client note.
Forza Horizon 3 is undoubtedly one of our most anticipated racing games of 2016, so it's unsurprising that it was one of the games at the top of our agenda as Alan trawled through the crowded halls of Gamescom searching for racing games to cover.
Holzer gave a lecture to a crowded hall of 722 people at the Holiday Inn By the Bay in Portland.
Surace and Chase give a thumbnail sketch of the plan in the video snippet above, which I shot in those crowded halls earlier this week.
It also looks like it should protect your right to falsely shout «fire» in a crowded hall, with the intent to cause a stampede (this isn't just a turn of phrase, there was an actual incident in which 73 people were killed which is believed to have started when someone falsely shouted that there was a fire).
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