Corridor
1corridor — [ kɔridɔr ] n. m. • 1611; de l it. corridore « passage étroit entre un local et un autre » 1 ♦ Passage couvert mettant en communication plusieurs pièces d un même étage. ⇒ couloir, passage. Long, étroit corridor. Au fond du corridor, à droite. «… …
2Corridor Vc — ( Corridor 5c ) is a branch of the fifth Pan European corridor. The path of the corridor is presently the European route E73, and a new highway is being constructed as part of the upgrade of the corridor. Vc connects Budapest in Hungary to the… …
3Corridor 7 — Разработчик Capstone Software Издатели Intracorp Entertainment GameTek Даты выпуска …
4Corridor 8 — or Corridor 8: Galactic Wars , was the planned sequel to the first person shooter video game Corridor 7 . The game was in development but was never finished because the developer, Capstone Software, went bankrupt along with their parent company …
5Corridor V — may refer to: Corridor V (Appalachian Development Highway System) Corridor V (Pan European corridor) This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change …
6Corridor I — may refer to:* Corridor I (Pan European corridor) * Corridor I (Appalachian Development Highway System) …
7Corridor X — may refer to Corridor X (Appalachian Development Highway System), part of Interstate 22 in the United States Pan European corridor X, one of the Pan European corridors This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an …
8Corridor — Cor ri*dor (k?r r? d?r or d?r), n. [F., fr. Itt. corridpore, or Sp. corredor; prop., a runner, hence, a running or long line, a gallery, fr. L. currere to run. See {Course}.] [1913 Webster] 1. (Arch.) A gallery or passageway leading to several… …
9Corridor — Corridor, der schmale Gang zwischen einer Reihe von Zimmern, nach welchem jedes derselben seinen Ausgang hat. Ost führt der Corridor nach einem größern Vorsaale, (Vestibule), doch muß er dann wie dieser eine Thüre zum Verschließen haben …
10corridor — 1590s, from Fr. corridor (16c.), from It. corridore a gallery, lit. a runner, from correre to run, from L. currere (see CURRENT (Cf. current)). Originally of fortifications, meaning long hallway is first recorded 1814 …