Stay At or In?
Stay At or In?
Hello and welcome to Fransy Fancy English! Do we stay in or at a hotel? Well, both are correct! If you say that you stayed "in" the hotel, it means that you didn't get out because of the weather or any other mishap. The preposition "in" is used when you mean on the premises of the hotel. When people mention the name of the hotel, they use the preposition "at".
"Many famous people stayed at/in this hotel."
"There is a sauna at/in the hotel."
"We dined/stayed in the hotel because the weather was terrible."
"The food at/in the hotel was awful."
"We stayed one week at/in the hotel."
"We arrived late at La Mamounia hotel."
We can live in
- a hut
- a hostel
- a house
- a tent
- a bungalow
- a lodge
- a chalet
- a motel/hotel room
- a villa
- an apartment
We stay at:
- a hostel
- a (seaside/mountain) resort
- a bed and breakfast
- a bungalow
- an inn
- a motel/hotel
- a holiday/mountain/hunting lodge
We stay in:
- a private room
- a hotel room
- a shared room
- a holiday home
- a caravan
- a villa
- an apartment
- a (beach/mountain) hut
- a guest house
- a tent
- a bungalow
- a motel
- a lodge
- a (ski) chalet
BEACH HUT
MOUNTAIN LODGE
BUNGALOW
RESORT
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