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[ UK /ˈɪnkiːpɐ/ ]
[ US /ˈɪnˌkipɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. the owner or manager of an inn

How To Use innkeeper In A Sentence

  • As the fight continued Amanda watched in fascination as her friendly innkeeper turned into a raging bull determined to tear his opponent limb from limb.
  • If an innkeeper who keeps a public house provides a car park, he invites those members of the public who find it convenient to come by car to leave their cars in that car park.
  • A failure to fulfil this duty on the part of the innkeeper may render the innkeeper liable to criminal prosecution.
  • After the Glorious Revolution, the law was modified: ordinary citizens were not required to find billets, but innkeepers were obliged to accept troops and a scale of charges laid down.
  • And go on following his traces wherever he's been since that time, and picking the brains of every innkeeper or potman or village customer who's had to deal with him. The Potter's Field
  • When Grete's drunken father loses her in a game of ninepins to the local innkeeper, she runs away to pursue Fritz. Ringing Down From the Hudson Valley
  • Before we were done the innkeeper came out once again and took up a post by his bar, needlessly polishing his mugs.
  • The show stealers of the nativity were the two word perfect girls who played the innkeepers, and the little lad playing Herod.
  • But Poetry Inn's allure is also compounded from smaller pleasures, small being the operative word in this mountainside bandit's hideaway: There are five guest rooms and a staff of ten, including three innkeeper/concierges who possess gratifyingly detailed memories for what pleases you. Dream Hideaways: The World's Top Microboutique Hotels
  • The innkeeper unbarred the main gates and pushed them back to reveal the stranger. Father Swarat
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