释义 |
hos·tel I. \ˈhästəl\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English ostel, hostel, from Old French, from Late Latin hospitale hospice — more at hospital 1. : a public house for entertaining or lodging travelers : inn < folks used to ride up the bumpy road … to dine at the little hostel — Hodding Carter > 2. a. chiefly Britain : housing maintained by a public or private organization or institution: (1) : dormitory 2 (2) : a rest home or rehabilitation center for the chronically ill, the aged, or the physically handicapped (3) : living quarters for newly arrived immigrants b. : one of a system of supervised inexpensive lodgings or shelters for use by youth especially on hiking or bicycling trips — called also youth hostel 3. obsolete : town house II. \“, dial -səl\ intransitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English hostelen, from hostel, n. 1. dialect England : lodge 2. : to travel usually by foot or by bicycle staying at hostels overnight < hundreds of outdoor-minded vacationers will hostel alone or in independent groups of two or three this summer — Phil Spelman > |