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Place to stay, for a while
Answer for the clue "Place to stay, for a while ", 8 letters:
marriott
Alternative clues for the word marriott
Word definitions for marriott in dictionaries
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 1425 Housing Units (2000): 471 Land area (2000): 7.255912 sq. miles (18.792725 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.201392 sq. miles (0.521604 sq. km) Total area (2000): 7.457304 sq. miles (19.314329 sq. km) FIPS code: 48300 Located within: Utah ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Marriott is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Bubba Marriott (born 1938), American football player Charles Marriott (1895–1966), English cricketer Charles Marriott (Tractarian) (1811–1858), Anglican priest, a fellow of Oriel College, Oxford, ...
Usage examples of marriott.
According to Miss Marriott, with whom Harriet Vane took refuge after the separation, the prisoner steadily refused to give any information on the subject, saying only that she had been painfully deceived by Boyes and never wished to hear his name spoken again.
He saw a Marriott room key in her hand and figured she was heading to the hotel to give some reporter a blow job straight from God, maybe convert him to Barnett's cause.
The officer of the bridge guard had sent a squad of men north and they were ahead of Marriott.
They caught a cab to the Harbor Beach Marriott, got a room, and fell asleep—.
On five or so long tables set up in the back of the Los Angeles Marriott LAX meeting room were hundreds of recordings of Bach, Beethoven, Wagner, Chopin, Tchaikovsky, Mozart, and others, and dozens of pro-nuclear power publications.
Marriott Longwharf, he replied casually, and saw her tighten up just a bit.
And her address was 1644 West Fifty-fourth Place, the place Marriott had the trust deed on.
Once you suspected anything it was easy to find out other connections, such as that Marriott owned a trust deed on Mrs.
Instead it was Marriott, always Marriott, who, with his tuppence worth of education, was unable to rid himself of the idea that he was superior to the illiterate men who were his fellow recruits.