1. interior - Noun
2. interior - Adjective
3. interior - Adjective Satellite
4. Interior - Proper noun
Being within any limits, inclosure, or substance; inside; internal; inner; -- opposed to exterior, or superficial; as, the interior apartments of a house; the interior surface of a hollow ball.
Remote from the limits, frontier, or shore; inland; as, the interior parts of a region or country.
That which is within; the internal or inner part of a thing; the inside.
The inland part of a country, state, or kingdom.
Source: Webster's dictionaryArt can only be truly art by presenting an adequate outward symbol of some fact in the interior life. Margaret Fuller
Prose is architecture, not interior decoration, and the Baroque is over. Ernest Hemingway
Poetry is the revelation of a feeling that the poet believes to be interior and personal but which the reader recognizes as his own. Salvatore Quasimodo
Nobody, who has not been in the interior of a family, can say what the difficulties of any individual of that family may be. Jane Austen
Homosexuality appears as one of the forms of sexuality when it was transposed from the practice of sodomy onto a kind of interior androgyny, a hermaphroditism of the soul. The sodomite had been a temporary aberration; the homosexual was now a species. Michel Foucault
There is one spectacle grander than the sea, that is the sky; there is one spectacle grander than the sky, that is the interior of the soul. Victor Hugo