Noun
doorway (plural doorways)
- The passage of a door; a door-shaped entrance into a house or a room.
1950 February, “Rolling Stock for London Transport”, in Railway Magazine, page 88:A re-arrangement of the seating in relation to doorway positions gives an even distribution of seated passengers, no change has been made in the number or size of the doorways.
- (figuratively) An opening or passage in general.
Translations
passage of a door
- Afrikaans: deuropening
- Bulgarian: вход (bg) m (vhod)
- Cebuano: pulta
- Cherokee: ᎦᎶᎯᏍᏗ (galohisdi)
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 門口 / 门口 (mun4 hau2)
- Mandarin: 門口 / 门口 (zh) (ménkǒu)
- Danish: døråbning c
- Dutch: deurgat (nl) n, deuropening (nl) f
- Esperanto: pordejo (eo)
- Finnish: oviaukko (fi), ovensuu (fi)
- French: embrasure de la porte f
- Galician: porta (gl) f, entrada (gl) f, portal m
- German: Türöffnung (de) f
- Greek: άνοιγμα πόρτας n (ánoigma pórtas)
- Irish: doras (ga) m
- Italian: uscio (it) m, via di accesso f
- Japanese: 戸口 (ja) (とぐち, toguchi)
- Korean: 출입구 (ko) (churipgu), 문간 (ko) (mun'gan)
- Latin: ostium n, ianua (la) f
- Macedonian: влез m (vlez)
- Mari:
- Eastern Mari: аҥ (aŋ)
- Navajo: chʼéʼétiin
- Norman: uss'sie
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: døråpning m or f
- Nynorsk: døropning f
- Old English: wāgþȳrel n
- Polish: wejście (pl)
- Portuguese: vão da porta m, porta (pt) f
- Russian: дверно́й проём m (dvernój projóm)
- Spanish: entrada (es)
- Swedish: dörröppning (sv) c
- Telugu: గుమ్మం (te) (gummaṁ)
- Walloon: poice (wa) m, tchapå (wa) m (entrance way)
- Welsh: drws (cy) m
|