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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a central aisle" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a main passageway in a building, such as a theater, church, or airplane, that runs down the middle of a space.
Example: "The church was beautifully designed, with a central aisle that led directly to the altar."
Alternatives: "main aisle" or "middle aisle".
Exact(7)
The stage and seating area is divided by black curtains on each side of a central aisle, creating a corridor through which the audience must enter.
Mr. Gober has turned the Marks gallery into a kind of church, complete with a central aisle, an altar and two inaccessible side chapels.
When the ceremony starts, they will walk down two separate aisles toward each other — getting their first full glimpse of their dresses at that moment — and then they will depart together down a central aisle.
The church was full of box pews which faced each other across a central aisle.
Renovations in 1955 included the addition of a central aisle and the removal of some of the church furnishings.
The interior of the church consists of a large, open floor plan, with wooden pews lined perpendicular to the north and south sides, thus creating a central aisle.
Similar(53)
As part of the redesign she created a grand central aisle in a cavernous space that once contained train tracks under a dramatic barrel-vaulted glass ceiling.
The church still stands, not far from the state capitol in the center of Honolulu, a copy in coral blocks, hand-hewn from local reefs, of a village Congregational church in New England, with a broad central aisle, pews for 1,500 and a fine old wall clock from Boston.
The bodies lay in unrecognizable knots, mostly in a cramped central aisle aiming toward the doors.
Palladio's facade became a design prototype for classical churches with a high nave, or central aisle, and lower aisles.
Here, though, it's the same text on both occasions and the same viscerally creepy settings and ambience – replete with a thrusting triangular chandelier that flares and frazzles like a synaptic storm, a revolve that opens up into an Alpine abyss, and a bell-rope in the central aisle that you can pull and set off a teeth-rattling toll.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com