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View synonyms for hotel

hotel

[ hoh-tel ]

noun

  1. a commercial establishment offering lodging to travelers and sometimes to permanent residents, and often having restaurants, meeting rooms, stores, etc., that are available to the general public.

    Synonyms: motel, guesthouse, hostel, hostelry

  2. a word used in communications to represent the letter H.
  3. Hotel, Military. the NATO name for a class of nuclear-powered Soviet submarines armed with single-warhead ballistic missiles: in service with the Soviet Navy 1959–91.


Hotel

1

/ həʊˈtɛl /

noun

  1. communications a code word for the letter h


hotel

2

/ həʊˈtɛl /

noun

  1. a commercially run establishment providing lodging and usually meals for guests, and often containing a public bar

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Other Words From

  • ho·tel·less adjective

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Word History and Origins

Origin of hotel1

First recorded in 1670–80; from French hôtel, Old French hostel hostel

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Word History and Origins

Origin of hotel1

C17: from French hôtel, from Old French hostel; see hostel

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Synonym Study

Hotel, house, inn, tavern refer to establishments for the lodging or entertainment of travelers and others. Hotel is the common word, suggesting a more or less commodious establishment with up-to-date appointments, although this is not necessarily true: the best hotel in the city; a cheap hotel near the docks. The word house is often used in the name of a particular hotel, the connotation being wealth and luxury: the Parker House; the Palmer House. Inn suggests a place of homelike comfort and old-time appearance or ways; it is used for quaint or archaic effect in the names of some public houses and hotels in the U.S.: the Pickwick Inn; the Wayside Inn. A tavern, like the English public house, is a house where liquor is sold for drinking on the premises; until recently it was archaic or dialectal in the U.S., but has been revived to substitute for saloon, which had unfavorable connotations: Taverns are required to close by two o'clock in the morning. The word has also been used in the sense of inn, especially in New England, ever since Colonial days: Wiggins Tavern.

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Example Sentences

Flesh encircled him at the main pool of the Paradise Hotel and Residences at Boca.

Scalise has called the talk, which he delivered in a hotel outside New Orleans, “a mistake I regret.”

The added charge for access to hotel Wi-Fi is not only exploitative but increasingly irrelevant.

“Personal hotspots can get speeds of up to 60 Mb/s down, whereas hotel Wi-Fi can be as slow as 1.5 Mb/s,” Sesar said.

If someone wants to ensure a direct and secure connection, no entity, whether a hotel or otherwise, should be able to block it.

“This house must have been the hotel of some distinguished family, Baron; it is nobly proportioned,” said David Arden.

There he gave orders for the car to be put into running condition for the following morning, and returned to the hotel.

Outside the hotel he came upon the two sisters sitting on a bench and drinking coffee.

I turned round, thrust my purse into the lap of the nearest, and with a light heart led the lady back to the hotel.

When he returned to the hotel he kissed his incongruous room-mate with the gentleness of a woman.

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