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Meaning of doorstep | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1 Standard
ˈdɔː(ɹ)stɛp

Definitions

  1. An outside step leading up to the door of a building, usually a home.
  2. An outside step leading up to the door of a building, usually a home
  3. One's immediate neighbourhood or locality.
    figuratively
  4. One's immediate neighbourhood or locality
  5. A thick slice, especially of bread.
    UK, informal
  6. A thick slice, especially of bread
  7. To visit one household after another to solicit sales, charitable donations, political support, etc
  8. To corner somebody for an unexpected interview

Equivalents

Беларуская парог
Български праг
བོད་སྐད སྒོའི་ཐེམ
Bosanski prag prah праг
Català llindar marxapeu
Čeština práh zápraží
Cymraeg rhiniog trothwy
Dansk dørtærskel
Ελληνικά κατώφλι
Español lumbral umbral
Suomi kynnys
Français seuil
Gaeilge tairseach
עברית סף
हिन्दी देहली
Hrvatski prag prah праг
Magyar küszöb
日本語 戸口の踏み段
Latina līmen
Македонски праг
मराठी उंबरठा
Polski pajda próg skiba
Português fationa soleira
Română prag
Русский порог
Slovenčina prah
Српски prag prah праг
Svenska tröskel
Türkçe eşik
Українська поріг

Examples

“Ailie was standing by the doorstep as he came down the road, and her heart stood still with joy.”
“With a little manœuvring they contrived to meet on the doorstep which was […] in a boiling stream of passers-by, hurrying business people speeding past in a flurry of fumes and dust in the bright haze.”
“The narrow streets that twist and turn through the compact heart of Dent are surfaced with cobbles which, in the absence of pavements, spread right across from doorstep to doorstep.”
“They want to build the prison right on our doorstep; it will only be half a mile away and being that close scares me.”
“As a Hitchin signalman once pointed out to me, when a regulating quandary arises concerning a fast-moving Class A train there is no time to consult Control and get their answer before the express is on one's doorstep.”
“Milk from the Eden Valley could be on London doorsteps the next morning. Limestone and agricultural lime from the Ribble Valley and gypsum from further north could at last be transported long distances by the trainload. The railway had been driven along, over and through the valuable substances that were on its doorstep, much akin to the situation in Britain's coalfields.”
“I cut myself a doorstep of bread with masses of butter and went along to see Romanov while I was eating it.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
See all C1 English words →

See also

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