corridor



the corridors of power

the highest level of government where the most important decisions are made His laziness became a legend in the corridors of power.
See also: corridor, of, power

corridors of power

The offices of powerful leaders. For example, As clerk to a Supreme Court justice, Jim thought he'd get his foot inside the corridors of power . This term was first used by C.P. Snow in his novel Homecomings (1956) for the ministries of Britain's Whitehall, with their top-ranking civil servants. Later it was broadened to any high officials.
See also: corridor, of, power

corridors of power

The places or positions from which people in authority wield power.
See also: corridor, of, power

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Natalianah-TAH-lyah (Polish, Italian, Spanish)Polish, Italian, Spanish, Romanian, Georgian, Late Roman
ThorntonTHAWRN-tənEnglish
Martynamahr-TI-nahPolish
Benesh-Yiddish
RalfRAHLF (German), RALF (English), RAYF (English)German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, English (Rare)
CirceSUR-see (English)Greek Mythology (Latinized)