Accommodation

//əˌkɑ.məˈdeɪ.ʃən//

"Accommodation" in a Sentence (17 examples)

The hotel has good accommodation.

The hotel has accommodation for one hundred.

Did you book accommodation at the hotel?

We need accommodation for six.

Does the price include accommodation?

If you have no way to buy food, clothing, accommodation and other such daily necessities, you definitely won't be able to have peace of mind.

I am looking for accommodation.

I guess I had better decide before I book the accommodation and flights.

During a stopover of more than 12 hours most airlines will provide some vouchers for food or accommodation.

Accommodation is in individual tents.

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The accommodations at that hotel were quite luxurious.

It is true, the organization of the humane and animal Body, with accommodation to their several functions and offices, is certainly fitted with the most curious and exact Mechanism imaginable

...and Lady Anne, for the present, felt as if Fanchette and her coach full of accommodations, heavy as they might once be supposed to be, were suddenly swallowed up in that awful sea, to which so many refractory spirits have been exorcised and consigned.

Mr. Cooke had had a sloop yacht built at Far Harbor, the completion of which had been delayed, and which was but just delivered. […] The Maria had a cabin, which was finished in hard wood and yellow plush, and accommodations for keeping things cold.

Some of the recent literature on the Germanic settlements reads like an account of a tea party at the Roman vicarage. A shy newcomer to the village, who is a useful prospect for the cricket team, is invited in. There is a brief moment of awkwardness, while the host finds an empty chair and pours a fresh cup of tea; but the conversation, and village life, soon flow on. The accommodation that was reached between invaders and invaded in the fifth- and sixth-century West was very much more difficult, and more interesting, than this.

It is probable to my apprehension, that many of those quotations were intended by the writers of the New Testament as nothing more than accommodations.

Pilots […] use the word fuselage whereas laypeople would more likely call the same "thing" the body of an aircraft. […] We have said above that speakers often signal that they belong to a certain group by making their language more similar to that of the other group members […] we thus adapt our language, dialect, accent, style and/or register to that of our addressee or addressees. This process is called speech accommodation. Among the reasons for accommodation may be our desire to identify more closely with the addressee(s), […]

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