corridor

noun

cor·​ri·​dor ˈkȯr-ə-dər How to pronounce corridor (audio)
ˈkär-,
-ˌdȯr
1
a
: a passageway (as in a hotel or office building) into which compartments or rooms open
b
: a place or position in which especially political power is wielded through discussion and deal-making
was excluded from the corridors of power after losing the election
2
: a usually narrow passageway or route: such as
a
: a narrow strip of land through foreign-held territory
b
: a restricted lane for air traffic
c
: a land path used by migrating animals
3
a
: a densely populated strip of land including two or more major cities
… the Northeast corridor stretching from Washington into New England …S. D. Browne
b
: an area or stretch of land identified by a specific common characteristic or purpose
a corridor of liberalism
the city's industrial corridor

Examples of corridor in a Sentence

They pushed me down the hospital corridor to the operating room. A corridor of land lies between the two mountain ranges.
Recent Examples on the Web Related article Heat wave shifts to New York and the I-95 corridor as search for more victims in the deadly New Mexico wildfires continues Others have not been as fortunate. Melanie Radzicki McManus, CNN, 22 June 2024 By the weekend, the most intense heat is expected to shift toward the Northeast urban corridor and the mid-Atlantic — areas that include Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington. NBC News, 18 June 2024 Around the corner, an even more mysterious corridor beckoned. Liam Hess, Vogue, 18 June 2024 Here’s what to know Fighting has continued in Rafah and southern Gaza a day after Israeli forces announced a daily 11-hour pause of operations along an aid corridor in the region, U.N. Relief and Works Agency Commissioner Philippe Lazzarini told Reuters on Monday. Miriam Berger, Washington Post, 17 June 2024 See all Example Sentences for corridor 

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'corridor.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Word History

Etymology

earlier "covered passageway, path surrounding fortifications," borrowed from French, borrowed from regional Italian (by-form of Tuscan corridoio), from correre "to run" (going back to Latin currere) + -idore, going back to Latin -i-tōrium (from -i- -i- + -tōrium, suffix of place, from neuter of -tōrius, adjective derivative of -tōr-, -tor, agent suffix) — more at current entry 1

First Known Use

1719, in the meaning defined at sense 1a

Time Traveler
The first known use of corridor was in 1719

Dictionary Entries Near corridor

Cite this Entry

“Corridor.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/corridor. Accessed 2 Jul. 2024.

Kids Definition

corridor

noun
cor·​ri·​dor ˈkȯr-əd-ər How to pronounce corridor (audio)
ˈkär-,
-ə-ˌdȯ(ə)r
1
: a passageway (as in a school) into which compartments or rooms open
2
: a narrow strip of land especially through territory held by an enemy
Etymology

from early French corridor "passageway," from early Italian corridore (same meaning), from correre "to run," from Latin currere "to run" — related to course, current

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