1. indoors - Noun
2. indoors - Adverb
Within the house; -- usually separated, in doors.
Source: Webster's dictionaryTea to the English is really a picnic indoors. Alice Walker
Indoors or out, no one relaxes; In March, that month of wind and taxes, The wind will presently disappear, The taxes last us all the year. Ogden Nash
The distinction between indoors and outdoors, which in England is usually so marked, was temporarily suspended in a hot gauzy haze. Quentin Crisp
In order to read one must sit down, usually indoors. I am restless and would rather sail a boat than crack a book. I've never had a very lively literary curiosity, and it has sometimes seemed to me that I am not really a literary fellow at all. Except that I write for a living. E. B. White
I wear my hat as I please, indoors or out. Walt Whitman
There is room enough indoors in New York City for the whole 1963 world's population to enter, with room enough inside for all hands to dance the twist in average nightclub proximity. Buckminster Fuller