Hotel is a noun.
The word 'supply' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:The hotel can supply a guide for our excursion. (verb)By the fifth day the supply of drinking water was gone. (noun)
The word 'supply' is both a verb and a noun.Examples:The hotel can supply a guide for our excursion. (verb)By the fifth day the supply of drinking water was gone. (noun)
The spelling holet is a conjugation of the German verb holen (to fetch).The transposition is the word "hotel" (an inn or lodging).
The verb form of location is locate.Locates, locating and located are also verbs.Some example sentences are:"We try to locate the hotel"."She locates the keys in the fish tank"."We are locating the suspect now"."A new planet has been located".
The correct spelling for both the noun (object) and verb (action) is book.An example sentence for the noun is "I am going to buy a new book later".An example sentence for the verb is "we need to book a hotel for our visit".
Dov' è l'hotel or Dove si trova l'hotel may be Italian equivalents of 'Where is the hotel'. The adverb 'dove'* means 'where'. The verb 'è' means '[he/she/it] is'. The reflexive 'si' means 'oneself'. The verb 'trova' means '[he/she/it] finds'. The questions respectively are pronounced 'DOH-veh loh-TEHL' and 'DOH-veh see TROH-vah loh-TEHL'.*The vowel 'e' of 'dove' drops when it merges with a verb that begins with a vowel. The temporary nature of the drop is indicated by the apostrophe: 'Dov'è'.
The word "books" is a noun, the plural form of the noun "book".The word "books" is verb, the third person, singular, present of the verb to "book".Examples:Noun: He carried a stack of books from the library.Verb: Sally books the hotels every summer, but it's her husband who pays.
No it is not. Lounge can be a noun (room or barroom) or a verb (to lay about or relax).
Example sentence for the verb 'travel':When we take our trip, we will travel by train.Example sentence for the noun 'travel':The hotel was lovely but the travel to get there was rough.
The object can be whatever you choose. egThe ghost haunted the house / castle / hotel / town hall / tower / cellar / classroom / pub / etc
stare pronounced: 'star-ray' with a roll on the 'r' To stay is the verb "stare" or "to stay." Often, Italians ask, "Come stai?" meaning "How are you staying?" or just "How are you?" Someone looking to stay in a hotel might ask, "Posso stare al vostro hotel?" which translates, "Can I stay in your hotel?"
Example sentence for the word 'access' as a noun:Our hotel room has access to the internet.The word 'access' is also a verb: access, accesses, accessing, accessed.