salon

سیلون
definition
noun
Tutors boast that at the college's Top To Toe hairdressing and beauty training salons , punters get as good a result as in a professional salon - but it might take a bit longer.
an establishment where a hairdresser, beautician, or couturier conducts business.
The accommodation comprises a fully fitted farmhouse kitchen, salon , dining room, three bedrooms, cellar, and floored loft.
a reception room in a large house.
example
Her daughter conducted a 'salon' that became a gathering place for the writers, artists, and musicians of the Harlem Renaissance.
a hairdressing 'salon'
have your hair cut in a professional 'salon'
The accommodation comprises a fully fitted farmhouse kitchen, 'salon' , dining room, three bedrooms, cellar, and floored loft.
Her grandparents once entertained poets and artists in their 'salon' , discussing the merits of T. S. Eliot.
There is a wine cellar in the basement, naturally, with the ground floor containing a living room, 'salon' , kitchen and office.
Before her departure to Spain she ran a successful beauty clinic with her sister Deirdre who ran a hairdressers 'salon' at New Line Road.
The whole staff was busy that day, cleaning and polishing every corner of Blumere, particularly the 'salon' and the dining room.
Caroline was a hairdresser at a local 'salon' , the best one there.
In addition to offering ways to reduce stress, the spa will also house a 'salon' , complete with hair styling, manicures and pedicures.
The grand 'salon' of this superb house is in the white and gold and carved work of the days of Napoleon I.
He returned for a time to the intellectual 'salons' of Paris and then served as French consul in New York City from 1783 to 1790, after which he returned permanently to France.
In their heyday in the 19th century exhibitions like the 'Salon' and the Summer Show were events of great social and artistic importance.
It was precisely over the course of the 'Salons' of 1833 and 1834 that Ingres emerged as the unambiguous champion of drawing, the very ‘personification of line,’ to adopt the phrase employed by Theophile Gautier.
He holds informal 'salons' at which artists are encouraged to bring work for his critique.
Tutors boast that at the college's Top To Toe hairdressing and beauty training 'salons' , punters get as good a result as in a professional salon - but it might take a bit longer.
Women were not absent from high politics because of the importance of 'salons' in French political life, where hostesses like Juliette Adam played the central role.
But socially he was entirely at home in those Third Republic 'salons' where politicians mixed with aristocrats, diplomats, and writers.
Botox injections, which reduce worry lines and crow's feet, are available from beauty clinics, hairdressing 'salons' and at Botox parties held in homes.
When we think about the work of diplomats, we think about well - dressed people, like him, but doing polite, discreet work in 'salons' and staterooms.
The painting Bathers at Asnieres roused little enthusiasm among the jury of the official 'Salon' and was rejected.
Throughout his career Huet exhibited regularly at the 'Salons' of the Academie royale, although from 1779 to 1785 he was increasingly concerned with the decorative arts.
Naively optimistic and resilient, Manet sought honours in the 'Salons' ; Degas was cynically indifferent to public acclaim.
Also misleading is the author's claim that Chopin was readily accepted in the Parisian 'salons' as a social equal rather than being merely an entertainer.
She regularly holds literary 'salons' and provides a hospitable setting and has done so for many years.
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