Writing dialogue is not as hard as you're letting it seem. You have dialogue all the time -- it's called talking. If you honestly cannot think of what your characters are going to say to one another, you need to go take a break and go somewhere out in public. Sit somewhere in the middle of a crowd for one to two hours and just listen to people talking. Then, go home and write down some of the things you heard people saying. That's dialogue.
Surely you have been to a hotel -- what would the desk clerk say to a guest, and what would the guest say back?
When you need to have your characters talk, just pretend it's you and a friend (or several friends), and have them say something you'd probably say in the same situation. Then imagine what your friends would say in reply, and go back and forth that way. As you become a better writer, your characters themselves will "tell" you what they want to say, because they become like real people to you.
bm vhb mcv ,
guest who did not do reservation and directly walk in to the hotel and registered there.
guest who did not do reservation and directly walk in to the hotel and registered there.
Give me a sample of dialog in telephone conversation of reservation.
A walk out guest is a person who leave the hotel without checking out and without settling the bills from the front office.
A walk out guest is a person who leave the hotel without checking out and without settling the bills from the front office.
guest who did not do reservation and directly walk in to the hotel and registered there.
walk up to him !
it is about he war. of the american
A walk-in is a guest who arrives at the hotel with no reservation.
He listened to the dialogue between the two people.
Joe said, "Wow! That was the best birthday ever."