Sentences with phrase «entire hall»

The phrase "entire hall" means the entire space or area inside a large room or building, from one end to the other. Full definition
The Frankfurt Book Fair, though situated in Germany, is a truly worldwide book event with entire halls dedicated to international publishing and rights, and vendors and exhibitors from literally all over the world.
Game development and the world of game design have become so large that people are willing to fill entire halls to gather and showcase their work, to learn from one another, and to network.
On a trip to an exhibition for outdoor recreation, the two discovered an entire hall devoted to tents — all the same, all utterly boring.
«Everyone involved with this event including our generous sponsors, talented chef teams, enthusiastic non-profit organizations and the entire HALL and WALT staff all donate their time to create a spectacular day.
The entire Hall is filled with butts.
He did so with a liberal dose of jingoism, winding up those pesky Russians and getting the entire hall to stand up for Britain's armed forces.
But you could count the number of black people in the entire hall on one hand.
For as many beauty products as I hoard (like an entire hall linen closet, I'm not proud), you'd think I'd be using all sorts of different makeup everyday, but in reality, I stick to only a few essentials.
At the end of the Hall H presentation, the entire Hall H audience of more than 6,000 fans were all invited to continue the celebration and join cast and filmmakers at a surprise Star Wars Fan Concert.
In 1966, he was chosen to represent France at the Venice Biennale, where an entire hall was dedicated to him.
This, of course, requires remodelling the entire hall — which will be a hard sell.
There's an entire hall at the IFA technology show dedicated to the latest and greatest audio products, and headphones play a big part of what's new this year.
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