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View synonyms for hideaway

hideaway

[ hahyd-uh-wey ]

noun

  1. a place to which a person can retreat for safety, privacy, relaxation, or seclusion; refuge:

    His hideaway is in the mountains.



adjective

  1. hidden; concealed; a hideaway compartment for luggage.

hideaway

/ ˈhaɪdəˌweɪ /

noun

  1. a hiding place or secluded spot
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of hideaway1

1870–75; noun, adj. use of verb phrase (transitive) hide ( something ) away or (intransitive) hide away
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Example Sentences

Explaining the popularity of the bar among locals and travelers, hotel executive Adriana Zermeno, a native to Mexico City, describes it as a “mystical hideaway where cocktails are inspired by magic and folklore and crafted with care by a talented team of women.”

From Salon

In the Exotic Desert Hideaway — a.k.a. the hotel bar — you might bump into Roman Wrosz, a 68-year-old inventor and longtime local who flies gliders at the otherwise lonely Jacumba airport.

The Exotic Desert Hideaway Bar — as dim as the desert day is bright— features kitschy nudes on the walls, DJs on weekends, $5 beer during happy hour and a $78 cocktail situation known as “The Fortune Teller.”

The drama, which is being performed upstairs at the Matrix in the cozy hideaway of the Henry Murray Stage, examines the old right-wing saw that a good guy with a gun somehow makes us all safer.

The fake talk show is a time-honored “S.N.L.” tradition — a lineage that goes all the way back to the days of “Consumer Probe,” continuing through the golden age of “Fernando’s Hideaway,” “Church Chat” and “Wayne’s World,” and into more contemporary offerings like “Bronx Beat.”

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hide-and-seekhideaway bed