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What do you call someone who stays at an inn?

2. The word for a person who stays at a hotel is guest, but the guest might live in the same city where the hotel is located, or the guest could have traveled across an ocean. The word guest is agnostic about the distance the guest has traveled.



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Extended Stay Hotels Here are some examples of amenities that an extended stay hotel might provide: Guest laundry facilities. Additional furnishings like a couch, extra TV and dining table. Kitchenettes with stoves, dishwashers, and other appliances.

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Inns are typically smaller than hotels and have fewer features. They may offer room service, but they typically do not have a restaurant or other amenities.

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: an establishment for the lodging and entertaining of travelers. b. : tavern. 2. : a residence formerly provided for British students in London and especially for students of law.

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The original meaning of inn was lodging and food for travelers, although today some inns don't have a restaurant or bar attached. If you own or manage an inn, you're an innkeeper. Inn comes from the Old English inne, inside or within.

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Guest inn means a facility with one kitchen, a shared dining area, with not more than a total of six lodging units, which are available within a single-family residence and/or cabin outbuildings providing short-term lodging and food services for paying guests.

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Size and scale: Motels tend to be smaller establishments with fewer rooms, while hotels are larger and offer a more extensive range of facilities. Inns fall somewhere in between, typically smaller in scale compared to hotels but larger than most motels.

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Generally someone who stays at a hotel or motel is a “guest” without much protection under the law. However, in certain circumstances, a hotel/motel guest can become a “tenant” with more legal protection from an eviction.

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HomeStay – Book beds, rooms and entire apartments or homes for short- and long-term, but also caters to students and workers.

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Hotels are less likely to have those one-of-a-kind spaces, but they are more likely to have a variety of amenities—think a full business center, gym, pool, laundry, breakfast area and restaurant, lobby, and more. In general, inns offer cheaper rates and more discounts than most hotels.

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Some inns are more charming versions of hotels, while others use the word inn simply to make them sound more appealing than a motel. The original meaning of inn was lodging and food for travelers, although today some inns don't have a restaurant or bar attached.

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The word hostel comes from the Latin hospitale meaning inn, large house. Think of a hostel as an inn for students or young people. Often you can stay in one of these places for relatively little money because multiple beds are in one room and you share the bathroom with other guests.

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Etymology. From Middle English in, inn, from Old English inn (“a dwelling, house, chamber, lodging”); akin to Icelandic inni (“a dwelling place, home, abode”), Faroese inni (“home”).

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Below, we'll talk about three different types of hotel guests and what they look for in a hotel.
  • Tourists. Tourists are from out of town and want to experience a new place to the fullest, but what do leisure and tourist travelers want in a hotel? ...
  • Business Travelers. ...
  • Event Travelers.


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Overview. In some areas of the world, guest houses are the only kind of accommodation available for visitors who have no local relatives to stay with. Among the features which distinguish a guest house from a hotel, or inn is the lack of a full-time staff.

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An innkeeper is someone who owns or manages an inn. When you arrive at an inn, the innkeeper might be the person who checks you in and gives you a key to your room (and maybe a chocolate on your pillow).

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