老公 你的小情人找你:inn,pub,hotel有何区别?

来源:百度文库 编辑:高校问答 时间:2024/05/11 13:51:57

inn
noun [C]
1 UK a pub where you can stay for the night, usually in the countryside

2 US a small hotel, usually in the countryside

3 Inn used in the names of some hotels and restaurants

pub UK
noun [C] (FORMAL public house)
a building in Britain where alcoholic drinks can be bought and drunk and where food is often available:
Do you want to go to (INFORMAL go down) the pub after work?
-our local pub
-a pub lunch.

hotel
noun [C]
a building where you pay to have a room to sleep in, and where you can eat meals:
-a 4-star hotel
-the Clarendon Hotel
-We stayed in/at a hotel on the seafront.
-hotel guests

In Australian sometimes a HOTEL is a PUB. In Austraila we can go to a HOTEL to have a few drinks (beers). Hotel still means "a building where you pay to have a room to sleep in" as well though. This usage of hotel is not used in America I think.