an inferior place

  • 31hole-in-the-wall — {n. phr.} A small place to live, stay in, or work in; a small, hidden, or inferior place. * /The jewelry store occupied a tiny hole in the wall./ * /When Mr. and Mrs. Green were first married, they lived in a little hole in fhe wall in a cheap… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 32hole-in-the-wall — {n. phr.} A small place to live, stay in, or work in; a small, hidden, or inferior place. * /The jewelry store occupied a tiny hole in the wall./ * /When Mr. and Mrs. Green were first married, they lived in a little hole in fhe wall in a cheap… …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 33hole-in-the-wall — n. phr. A small place to live, stay in, or work in; a small, hidden, or inferior place. The jewelry store occupied a tiny hole in the wall. When Mr. and Mrs. Green were first married, they lived in a little hole in the wall in a cheap apartment… …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 34hole in the wall — a small place to live, stay in or work in; small hidden or inferior place We went for a drink at a little hole in the wall near the university last night …

    Idioms and examples

  • 35eye, human — ▪ anatomy Introduction  specialized sense organ capable of receiving visual images, which are then carried to the brain. Anatomy of the visual apparatus Structures auxiliary to the eye The orbit       The eye is protected from mechanical injury… …

    Universalium

  • 36race — race1 /rays/, n., v., raced, racing. n. 1. a contest of speed, as in running, riding, driving, or sailing. 2. races, a series of races, usually of horses or dogs, run at a set time over a regular course: They spent a day at the races. 3. any… …

    Universalium

  • 37Race — /rays/, n. Cape, a cape at the SE extremity of Newfoundland. * * * I Term once commonly used in physical anthropology to denote a division of humankind possessing traits that are transmissible by descent and sufficient to characterize it as a… …

    Universalium

  • 38nervous system, human — ▪ anatomy Introduction       system that conducts stimuli from sensory receptors to the brain and spinal cord and that conducts impulses back to other parts of the body. As with other higher vertebrates, the human nervous system has two main… …

    Universalium

  • 39Ecclesiastical Courts —     Ecclesiastical Courts     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Ecclesiastical Courts     I. JUDICIAL POWER IN THE CHURCH     In instituting the Church as a perfect society, distinct from the civil power and entirely independent of it, Christ gave her… …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 40Roman Britain — History of the British Isles This box: view · talk · edit …

    Wikipedia