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Discover LudwigThe word "Cubicle" is correct and usable in written English
It is typically used to refer to a small, enclosed workspace in an office environment. Example: "She spent most of her day working in her cubicle, surrounded by the sounds of typing and phone calls."
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"I went to the bathroom alone and after half an hour my friend found me collapsed face-down in a cubicle, with the door locked and my feet sticking out from underneath it," she says.
You're telling me you don't have hundreds of men popping into your cubicle in the accounting department of your mid-sized, regional dry-goods distributor to inform you that – hmm – you're too fat to rape, but perhaps they'll saw you up with an electric knife?
A patient referred to CAMHS waits in an A&E cubicle, thus limiting space to see other patients.
The second was in high school, when I was sitting in what I thought was a private toilet stall and looked up to find half a dozen of my so-called friends leaning over from the next cubicle, laughing.
O'Malley is a mishmash of a stray Kennedy and the type of policy obsessive who even thinktanks keep locked away in a back office cubicle.
Picture the scene: perhaps in the secret back room of a nightclub, reserved for VIPs, or perhaps in a humble lavatory cubicle, we find three legendary libertine pleasure-seekers, eyes wild, in the midst of a night of crazed, hang-the-consequences gratification, lines of cocaine chopped out before them.
Stephanie and David spent the first terrifying day of married life sheltering from the 150mph winds in a shower cubicle.
Afraid to sit on toilets in case a rat emerged from the U-bend, at school I also had to leave the cubicle door unlocked for fear of being accidentally locked in all night.
Goffin and King wrote their songs cooped up in a cubicle at a huge publishing house at 1650 Broadway in New York, and this song was surely as autobiographical as the ones about their break-up (Just Once in My Life, Road to Nowhere).
The 2,000 internees carried with them into the camp a substantial library that circulated from cubicle to cubicle, bunk to bunk, and was my first exposure to adult fiction – popular American bestsellers, Reader's Digest condensed books, Somerset Maugham and Sinclair Lewis, Steinbeck and HG Wells.
One was a sign on my primary school toilet cubicle door: "Now wash your hands".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com