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hostel
[hos-tl]
noun
Also called youth hostel. an inexpensive, supervised lodging place for young people on bicycle trips, hikes, etc.
(formerly) a residence for the exclusive use of boarding Indigenous students, separate from but close to any of a series of day schools in northern Canada that were operated or funded by the federal government and were themselves open to students of any ethnicity.
British., a student residence at a university or boarding school.
an inn.
verb (used without object)
to travel, lodging each night at a hostel.
hostel
/ ˈhɒstəl /
noun
a building providing overnight accommodation, as for the homeless, etc
See youth hostel
a supervised lodging house for nurses, workers, etc
archaic, another word for hostelry
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of hostel1
Example Sentences
Or her Delhi architecture school days, when she was too broke for jewellery and wore "cow beads" - fat glass beads strung across cow horns, bought off herdsmen near the hostel.
At Zandvoort this weekend, Burgess has clawed money back by staying in a capsule hostel for the first time.
In recent times there was a plan to redevelop it as a 41-bedroom hostel, and a separate proposal to turn it into a museum and visitor attraction at a cost of £13m.
Homeless people at a hostel in Belfast have said living conditions at the facility, including a bed bug infestation, are making them ill.
In one case, Ipswich Borough Council and the East Riding of Yorkshire Council had argued that hotels in their patches were being illegally changed into hostels - pretty complex issues relating to local planning controls.
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