Innkeeper in a sentence as a noun

No, the **** beats the bawd and the innkeeper beats the ****.

All things that the average part-time innkeeper doesn't have.

The innkeeper says in Japanese, "you wouldn't like it here, we have Japanese bathrooms.

Yes, if you're interested you can look up hospitality law or innkeeper law.

Right, so for this order to be "topsy-turvy", the **** would have to have higher status than the innkeeper outside of the game.

An innkeeper who sells out all of the rooms at low price and low density isn't really doing any favors to the people who are out in the cold.

Given this parallel relationship to guests, innkeepers and steamboat operators should bear the same kinds of duties to guests.

Referring to the popular television show that featured Mr. Newhart as a Vermont innkeeper.

For purposes of liability for theft from a passenger, should the steamboat owner be viewed as more like the innkeeper or more like the train owner?

Thus, as early as 1868 his status as an army veteran had exempted him from the heavy expense of obtaining an innkeeper’s licence.

Thus, the moneylender trumps the nobleman, the priest the moneylender, the bawd the priest, the **** the bawd, the innkeeper the ****, the wine merchant the innkeeper, and so on.

If people don't like to have an inn next door, they have every right to speak up against it, organize if possible, and make life **** for the innkeeper so that he moves someplace else.

" The court noted that both innkeepers and steamboat operators are entrusted with high levels of confidence in the face of temptations by many to endanger guests.

Though nothing came of it, a police officer told him he could have been charged under a crime called "Defrauding an innkeeper" for ordering a service/product under false pretenses.

Every innkeeper shall at all times keep and maintain on the premises of hotel a guest register in which shall be inscribed the name and home address of each guest and shall contain such guest's vehicle description and license plate state and number.

The passenger claimed the owner nonetheless was strictly responsible, regardless of any failure or compliance with care, in light of prior case ruling that innkeepers were strictly liable for the theft of boarders' valuables.

I met an innkeeper in Alaska once that had worked in tech for 20 years, lived like a grad student, and when his kid was a teenager, bought a sailboat, sailed around the world, and came to settle in Seward, Alaska because they'd fallen in love with the town.

Innkeeper definitions

noun

the owner or manager of an inn

See also: host boniface