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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a corridor somewhere" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to refer to an unspecified corridor in a vague or general sense, often in storytelling or descriptive contexts.
Example: "As I wandered through the old building, I could hear echoes of footsteps coming from a corridor somewhere in the distance."
Alternatives: "a hallway nearby" or "a passageway somewhere".
Exact(2)
Thursday, a corridor somewhere near the press gallery.
One leak was an absolute cracker: it was the only time I have been handed the near-mythological brown envelope in a corridor somewhere and, after peeking inside, felt as if the contents were burning in my bag as I raced back to my desk.
Similar(58)
And, stalking the corridors somewhere, good old Hezza, who looks magnificent, his hair ungreyed and lustrously long.
That's a decent idea, except something's gone wrong in the execution and the narrow room gives you an overwhelmingly strong feeling of being in a corridor, or maybe an airport departure lounge – somewhere on the way to somewhere else.
A corridor was revealed.
Just a woman walking down a corridor.
Beyond was a corridor lined with cells.
Toilets: At the back down a corridor.
Down a corridor, I found this room.
He writes: 'A large man makes a huge corridor, and a small child a small corridor.
As he awaited his moment at the magnetometer today, Steve Stolov was comforted by a single thought: somewhere in a gilded corridor of the Louisiana Superdome, Paul Tagliabue, the N.F.L. commissioner, was also getting frisked and searched, a metal detector passed between his ankles and over his head.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com