English edit

Noun edit

ball alley (plural ball alleys)

  1. (Ireland) A place for playing handball, ranging in structure from a patch of hard flat ground beside a gable to an indoor four-walled court similar to a squash court
    • 1855, Anthony Marmion, The ancient and modern history of the maritime ports of Ireland, p.300 (London: J.H. Banks):
      A portion of it was still further desecrated ; up to a very recent period being used as a racket-court, or ball-alley
    • 2011, Keith Duggan, House of Pain: Through the Rooms of Mayo Football[1], →ISBN, page 58:
      Perhaps the single most poignant image in the book is of the handball champion Mickey Walsh, described by Healy as 'our last hero' tossing a ball to himself in the dilapidated ball alley.
    • 2013, November 6, Siobhan Lincoln, Ardmore Memory and Story - The Village "Roads And Houses" p.2 (Waterford Museum):
      The school was partly in front of them and on fine evenings, the gable end was used as a ball alley and it was quite a gathering place for young people.
    • 2015, Paul Rouse, Sport and Ireland: A History[2], →ISBN, page 60:
      In Kilkenny City, there was also a tennis court in existence by 1798. This court later became known as a racket court and then a ball alley.
  2. (US, obsolete) A bowling alley

Synonyms edit