lobby به انگلیسی
From Longman Dictionary
lob‧by1 /ˈlɒbi $ ˈlɑːbi/ ●○○ noun (plural lobbies) [countable]
a wide passage or large hall just inside the entrance to a public building
a hall in the British parliament where members of parliament and the public meet
one of the two passages in the British parliament where members go to vote for or against a bill
a group of people who try to persuade a government that a particular law or situation should be changed
an attempt to persuade a government to change a law, make a new law etc
lobby2 ●○○ verb (lobbied, lobbying, lobbies) [intransitive, transitive]
to try to persuade the government or someone with political power that a law or situation should be changed
Example
Both classes shared a lobby which had racks on two levels for coats
Perhaps it is time to recognise that the country-sport vote and lobby should also be taken seriously
It is a textbook case of how effectively corporate lobbies work in Brussels, not just Washington
In his lobby the building management had set up a television screen so that the doorman could watch for criminals
The tropical plants in the lobby, I notice, are fake as well
The president’s lobbying on behalf of his programme was uneven and spasmodic