Noun
a room for receiving and entertaining visitors (as in a private house or hotel)
Source: WordNet"At Maecenas' reception room" Maecenas is most famous for his support of young poets, hence his name has become the eponym for a "patron of arts". Source: Internet
Features to note include the double garage, refitted modern kitchen, downstairs shower room, corner plot and extra reception room. Source: Internet
The story opens with Andie Miller sitting in the reception room of her ex-husband North Archer's law office, holding on to 10 years of un-cashed alimony checks and some--okay, a lot--of unresolved rage over the way their brief marriage ended. Source: Internet
The other one is the key to the reception room where the ballerinas were allowed with their chaperone, which Madame Giry is supposed to represent, to receive gentlemen visitors after the show. Source: Internet
The banquet hall was the largest reception room in the sprawling palace the locals called the Fortress of Heaven, the ceremonial capital of the realm of Dryienjaiyeel and the seat of power of the hereditary monarch, the Jiraiy XII. Source: Internet
It’s been a quarter century since the Human Rights Campaign had its first annual fundraiser with 100 people in the reception room of the Americana apartments. Source: Internet