guesthouse
See also: guest house
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Middle English gest hous, gistenehus, gystehuse, gesthus, partly from Old English gæsthūs, ġesthūs (“guesthouse, hostel; guest-chamber”), from Proto-West Germanic *gastihūs; and partly from Old Norse gesthús (“guesthouse; guest-chamber”); both from Proto-Germanic *gastihūsą, corresponding to guest + house.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editguesthouse (plural guesthouses)
- A small house near a main house, for lodging visitors.
- A private house offering accommodation to paying guests; a boarding house; a bed and breakfast.
- 2009 March 13, Pico Iyer, “Heaven’s Gate”, in The New York Times[2]:
- For me, in any case, Ladakh seemed a beautifully unfallen place next to the blue-glass shopping malls of modern Lhasa, the global village of pizza joints and guesthouses that is urban Nepal, or long-isolated Bhutan with its chic new hotels.
- 2009 August 30, Laura M. Holson, “A Dip Into Hollywood”, in The New York Times[3]:
- And Ms. Davies’s 7,000-square-foot guesthouse, the only building from the original estate to survive, is already a favorite among card-playing foursomes and others who want to lounge on the second-story deck and watch dolphins bob in the whitecapped waves.
Synonyms
edit- See also Thesaurus:lodging place
Hypernyms
editHyponyms
edit- (client accommodations): paying guest house, PG house
Descendants
editTranslations
editsmall house for visitors
|
boarding house — see boarding house
Anagrams
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- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Old Norse
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English compound terms
- English 2-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with quotations
- English terms with consonant pseudo-digraphs
- en:Hotels
- en:Housing