rooming house

NOUN
  1. a house where rooms are rented
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How To Use rooming house In A Sentence

  • Past the rooming house, at the end of the passageway, is the front (pedestrian) entrance to the compound. The hidden places of Oaxaca
  • Jade Moon collected some modest interest on her investment in the shop, and with that and the two hundred and thirty dollars from the kye, she and Mr. Ha were able to purchase another rooming house, smaller than the one in Makiki, this one in Excerpt: Honolulu by Alan Brennert
  • Rooming houses" or "boardinghouses" have been increasing, but west side residents in the 4th ward neighborhood say many times there are problems such as home maintenance, underage drinking, parking and high-turnover related to college students that contradictsthe character of the neighborhood. Archive 2009-02-01
  • He drops out of school, moves into a rundown rooming house, telling no one his new address, and spends his time drinking and bar fighting.
  • On the stair leading up into the disinfectant-smelling twilight of a rooming house, she saw an old man huddled, shaking with grief she couldn't hear.
  • The hypothesized community in network, like the life community and rooming house of the undergraduate students, etc, has become a very important form of the new type undergraduate organization.
  • Its brilliantly evoked opening describes a shabby rooming house in which "spacious rooms had been sliced to cubicles where the staccato chatter of the inmates, relayed like tom-tom messages, mingled with the crash of irreconcilable radios. The First Lady Of Futurism
  • In Toledo, a medium-sized city of just over 243,000 at the time, Phelan estimated “that at least 20,000 young persons live in the 300 rooming houses which are located within walking distance of the picture houses.” A Renegade History of the United States
  • They had never had a proper home as a family in Germany: touring with the dance company and staying in rooming houses, the children living most of the time with their grandmother and great-aunts, away from the parents.
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