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hosteler

American  
[hos-tl-er] / ˈhɒs tl ər /
especially British, hosteller

noun

  1. a person who operates a hostel.

  2. a person who stays at a hostel or goes hosteling.


Usage

What is a hosteler? A hosteler is someone who runs a hostel, which is an inexpensive, communal lodging place for travelers, often young adults. A hosteler is also someone who stays in a hostel, as in To afford her tour of Europe, Ursula traveled as a hosteler. While someone staying at a hostel for just one night is still called a hosteler, the term usually refers to someone who frequently stays at hostels or is traveling a country, moving from hostel to hostel. Typically, hostelers are young adults, because hostels began as inexpensive housing for youth traveling by foot or bike, but hostels have since evolved to be for all ages in some countries. Example: A few of the hostelers said that the air conditioning keeps going out.

Etymology

Origin of hosteler

1250–1300; Middle English; hostel, -er 2; akin to Old French hostelier

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

About a year ago Mr. Carter did what many a U. S. hosteler had done in the past�installed a miniature putting course on his lawns.

From Time Magazine Archive

During a party on the 18th-floor Starlight Roof, the hustling hosteler slipped behind the bar to mix a drink for New Mexico Governor Edwin Mechem.

From Time Magazine Archive

"Yea," quoth this hosteler, and shewed him all the hole circumstaunce, what was both sayde and thought on him for the thing.

From The Rogues and Vagabonds of Shakespeare's Youth Awdeley's 'Fraternitye of vacabondes' and Harman's 'Caveat' by Awdeley, John

"Hadest thou so?" quoth this hosteler; "nowe, by the masse, and I wyll haue some to, or I wyll lye in the duste or I come agayne."

From The Rogues and Vagabonds of Shakespeare's Youth Awdeley's 'Fraternitye of vacabondes' and Harman's 'Caveat' by Awdeley, John

"I, by my trouth," quoth this hosteler, "and nothing greues me so much, neyther my beating, neither the losse of my money, as doth my euell and wreched lucke."

From The Rogues and Vagabonds of Shakespeare's Youth Awdeley's 'Fraternitye of vacabondes' and Harman's 'Caveat' by Awdeley, John