Dormitory in a sentence as a noun

It seems to me we don't like them for the same reason we don't want to live in a big dormitory. We want our own space.

A suburb that isn't a place where you can actually live - there's a name for that in french, we call them cités dortoirs - dormitory towns. No one wants to live there.

At the entrance of student dormitory: "We can't go inside for our jackets?" "You can't enter!"

I stayed in a nice dormitory-style guest house run by Oakhouse. Rent was about $750 per month, with no key money or anything like that.

Entire new dormitory blocks sprang up. Two, all new, state of the art sports centers opened up and were opened to the local community.

So I found a large piece of cardboard from the trashcans behind the dormitory, and some supplies, and spent an hour or so creating a board game. When I presented it to the group, people were stunned.

I lived in a company dormitory during a one year internship at NTT Data. Was nice as a foreigner.

Paper is not the answer for a pauper with no room to call his own, nor for a factory hand living in a dormitory. There are many people alive right now for whom paper is already not the answer.

The bus system allows these companies to use SF as a sort of dormitory community That is a good point. >Perhaps many Google employees would prefer living in Mountain View if they could.

Students that participated in the protests were kidnapend from the dormitory. [2] Those slides of Ukraine are not at all surpising.

During the school year most of the time I have the same experience -- all articles are freely available when I sit in a library or in my room in students' dormitory. Then the summer holidays come, and bam, my head hits the paywall.

Perhaps you would be assigned to the female dormitory if you studied abroad there, and embarrassingly had to file paperwork to change that. Would you want to make a small note on your email signature saying "I'm a man!"

Think of it like a really crowded dormitory whose lower floors are overrun by a never-ending frat party. The first person you run into when you show up will likely be projectile vomiting, or teabagging someone who passed out.

These small dormitory-style apartments are built in very walkable areas of the city, and priced so that students, artists, and baristas can afford to live in them. They're generally built without any parking at all, which helps keep costs down.

Space is limited and only one hundred of the students will receive places in the dormitory. To complicate matters, the Dean has provided you with a list of pairs of incompatible students, and requested that no pair from this list appear in your final choice.

>rooms in a dormitory instead of housing vouchers, standardized cheapo clothing instead of money to purchase Modern Couture I totally agree with the idea that instead of just giving money we should give them work. Personally I would farm out most government jobs to the unemployed.

Instead of paying money, you could pay with in-kind benefits: rooms in a dormitory instead of housing vouchers, standardized cheapo clothing instead of money to purchase Modern Couture, cafeteria meals instead of McD's. Thus, even if your material standard of living doesn't go up from getting a job, your status does.

Decadent as it may be to sit in an air-conditioned office and make stupid iPhone games for other spoiled, decadent first worlders to play, at least that guy living in the Foxconn dormitory and assembling iPhones all day might be grateful to us for making sure he still has work. I'm sure the guys who made "Angry Birds" boosted demand just enough to buy a few weeks breakfast, lunch, and dinner for maybe a couple thousand Chinese factory workers.

But I've only been here two years, and it didn't take long for me to get sick of having a home situation that's in many ways worse than when I lived in my college's dormitory and significantly worse than my last two years of college living in a one bedroom apartment. With no lack of great and lucrative career opportunities in the area, I wish I didn't have to either live like a starving college kid in a house packed full of starving college kids or spend 20 hours a week searching for an affordable studio apartment in a tolerable location.

Dormitory definitions

noun

a college or university building containing living quarters for students

See also: dorm hall

noun

a large sleeping room containing several beds