innkeeper造句

You can tell the innkeeper about that or not.

The next day, he gave money to the innkeeper, asked the innkeeper to look after the man.

The maid piled Van Norden's belongings on the sidewalk, and the innkeeper looked sourly at them.

There was no room for them at the inn, But the innkeeper said they could sleep in the stable.

When Mary goes into labor, the innkeeper offers them the stable, where Mary gives birth to baby Jesus among the barn animals.

The innkeeper leaned closer. "A very high-level meeting, I believe. Don't know what it's about. But I expect more of these meetings in the future."

Freddie had proved to be nothing more than an innkeeper and ladies' man, the idiom for ladies' man untranslatable but connotating a greedy infant always at its mother's nipple--in short, unmanly.

innkeeper造句

The innkeeper is a perfectionist.

When Hung-chien asked the innkeeper for a spittoon, the innkeeper answered, "You mean you cannot find room enough to spit in a big place like this?

"If we find kittens here we kill them." said the innkeeper.

A medieval innkeeper, for example, often offered the only lodging in town; a boatman could cross only with the king's writ.

35the next day he took out two silver COINS and gave them to the innkeeper. 'Look after him,' he said, 'and when I return, I will reimburse you for any extra expense you may have.'

The innkeeper stood in one corner and watched the affair.

A woman who runs a rooming house or an inn; an innkeeper

The innkeeper, frightened lest he should be attacked, left his new coat in the thief's hand and ran as fast as he could into the inn for safety.

I'll be the innkeeper.

The innkeeper recognized Robin but knew not to say so. Instead he acted as if he were a new customer.

The pedlars, who had come specially to cash in on the usual New Year's bazaar trade, didn't even make enough to pay for their food. They couldn't pay their rent at the local inn and quarrelled with the innkeeper every day.

Even when she gave him a rather cursory explanation of what she intended, the former innkeeper refused to depart.

Shelley and Byron were the sons of aristocrats while Keats was the son of an innkeeper.

Once upon a time, in a beautiful mountain inn, there was a greedy old innkeeper who was always thinking about money.

The innkeeper scored up the man's indebtedness on a slate.