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roadhouse
[rohd-hous]
noun
plural
roadhousesan inn, dance hall, tavern, nightclub, etc., located on a highway, usually beyond city limits.
roadhouse
/ ˈəʊˌʊ /
noun
a pub, restaurant, etc, that is situated at the side of a road, esp a country road
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of roadhouse1
Example Sentences
The congressional seat can’t be surrendered to “a political hack,” she told a few score at a roadhouse grill in Amboy, done up with cobwebs and skeletons for Halloween.
But he found consistent money playing music with his band throughout the red dirt roadhouse circuit in Oklahoma and Texas.
Lage takes some modal and chromatic detours, and the pianist Kris Davis flings around free-jazz clusters, but the track never loses a rowdy roadhouse spirit.
A desert roadhouse with a world-class license plate collection.
In contrast to strait-laced Seattle, where suds stopped flowing at 2 a.m. and never on Sundays, Georgetown’s unregulated taverns, eateries and roadhouses were open round-the-clock, serving laborers the hoppy product of their labors.
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