Hospitality in a sentence as a noun

People in the service/hospitality industry know how to deal with these situations and do so all the time. If it happens again call the law.

I appreciate the hospitality that you guys have shown me and the respect, and the last meal was really good. The reason it took them so long is because they couldn’t find a vein.

Lots of business up here have a little sign in their shop "Yukon hospitality - it grows on you". I genuinely wonder if the climate has something to do with this.

And this is why the hospitality industry is organizing against them. I love the AirBnB idea and the implementation.

The Airbnbs knew zero about the hospitality industry when they started. They just knew they'd had a life-changing experience when they rented out airbeds on their floor during a conference.

That said: * This is in London, which doesn't have the same "tipping culture" as the US. Sure hospitality jobs don't pay great, but both my wife and I have worked them in the UK and you can definitely get by without tips. Getting snippy about a drop in tips is nowhere near as justified here.

People do not dispense presents or hospitality out of goodwill, but necessity, because it would be shameful to accept it without returning the favor. Of course, a known tendency in such a society can be to become completely dishonest.

If I were in the hospitality industry, I'd be buying adjacent shops next to every Tesla charging station. Having a captive, wealthy audience for ~30 minutes seems like a ripe opportunity, whether it is restaurants, masseuses, or cafes.

I believe they could chose to rescind the offer of hospitality at this point -- they haven't received the money, so if they are uncomfortable with the individual, they can still do something about it. I know this is an emotional issue, but their response was hardly "blantantly inconsistent ...

I was certainly grateful for their hospitality, however self-sufficiency, even if it comes to the extent of living in a car and scalping soccer tickets for a living, feels completely different than being a welfare case. As a result, I wasn't living in a car for lack of other options, but rather out of belief that I could create something by sheer will-power, and that I was going to do that come **** or high water.

PS I do realize that my situation is quite specific - see comment above or below, hospitality industry, busy market, price-sensitive audience, not a big brand name, etc. It may work for you, it just doesn't work for us, and not just because of the fake likes.

And for all this wondrous hospitality, which was so instrumental in my formative years and my coming of age, so inextricably bound up in who I am today, with so many friendships and experiences that continue to endure, to forever be fixtures of my fond reminiscing and my imagination, my parents and their peers routinely got harassment from the state department of family and children's services. Supposedly we were being "neglected".

Quote Examples using Hospitality

AirBnB's most ardent supporters like to focus on zoning and hospitality laws, suggesting that they're antiquated, anti-competitive, etc. Some of these arguments are quite reasonable in my opinion, but what about private contracts? I have yet to see convincing arguments around the issue of hosts who are violating their contracts with their landlords and/or homeowners associations. Most apartment leases have strict terms around subletting and many HOAs have restrictions around property use that would be in conflict with AirBnB-style short term rentals. Even if AirBnB doesn't have a legal obligation to help enforce these, given the number of listings that are ostensibly governed by leases and/or HOA rules, it seems implausible that AirBnB isn't aware that a good number of its hosts are breaking private contracts, potentially exposing those hosts, their neighbors and even their "guests" to a variety of risks. Does AirBnB not have a moral obligation to address this? I'd love to see more AirBnB supporters take on this issue. At least it would be more entertaining and perhaps even more enlightening than the recurrent arguments against zoning and hospitality laws.

Anonymous

Hospitality definitions

noun

kindness in welcoming guests or strangers