All hotel synonyms
ho·tel
H h noun hotel
- tavern — a place where liquors are sold to be consumed on the premises.
- house — a building in which people live; residence for human beings.
- motel — a hotel providing travelers with lodging and free parking facilities, typically a roadside hotel having rooms adjacent to an outside parking area or an urban hotel offering parking within the building.
- resort — to have recourse for use, help, or accomplishing something, often as a final available option or resource: to resort to war.
- inn — a river in central Europe, flowing from S Switzerland through Austria and Germany into the Danube. 320 miles (515 km) long.
- lodging — a small, makeshift or crude shelter or habitation, as of boughs, poles, skins, earth, or rough boards; cabin or hut.
- hostel — Also called youth hostel. an inexpensive, supervised lodging place for young people on bicycle trips, hikes, etc.
- dump — to drop or let fall in a mass; fling down or drop heavily or suddenly: Dump the topsoil here.
- caravansary — in the Near and Middle East, a kind of inn with a large central court, where caravans stop for the night
- hospice — a house of shelter or rest for pilgrims, strangers, etc., especially one kept by a religious order.
- spa — a resort town in E Belgium, SE of Liège: famous mineral springs.
- hostelry — an inn or hotel.
- flophouse — a cheap, run-down hotel or rooming house.
- fleabag — a cheap, run-down hotel or rooming house.
- auberge — an inn or tavern
- roadhouse — an inn, dance hall, tavern, nightclub, etc., located on a highway, usually beyond city limits.
- guesthouse — a small building, separate from a main house or establishment, for the housing of guests.
- bed and breakfast — Bed and breakfast is a system of accommodation in a hotel or guest house, in which you pay for a room for the night and for breakfast the following morning. The abbreviation B&B is also used.
- lodging house — a house in which rooms are rented, especially a house other than an inn or hotel; rooming house.
- lodge — Henry Cabot, 1850–1924, U.S. public servant and author: senator 1893–1924.
- bar — A bar is a place where you can buy and drink alcoholic drinks.
- greasy spoon — a cheap and rather unsanitary restaurant.
- pub — a bar or tavern.
- transport café — an inexpensive eating place on a main route, used mainly by long-distance lorry drivers
- public house — British. a tavern.
- rooming house — a house with furnished rooms to rent; lodging house.
- boarding house — A boarding house is a house which people pay to stay in for a short time.