Find the word definition

Wiktionary
bunkroom

n. A room with bunks for sleeping.

Usage examples of "bunkroom".

D-112, an eight-man bunkroom, and Sam was showing him how to set the lock on the one empty locker when there was a distant call on a loudspeaker.

He located Sam as soon as he was off watch, digging him out of his bunkroom and taking him out into the corridor.

He looked at the monitors showing the galley and the bunkroom and decided on the latter.

The bunkroom held the ghostly aroma of ancient spices: cinnamon and clove.

They might only be pretending to have a conversation about the cactuses while they actually crept toward the bunkroom door.

He knew that this bunkroom, like all compartments on the ship, was sealed air-tight and pressure-tight when its oval hatch was dogged, setting in action the emergency oxygen supply.

As he made his way from the lounge toward the bunkroom, his mind was flaming with excitement.

Peter Brig-ham carefully avoiding Lars now, rising before Lars awoke, never in the bunkroom, always in a group in the lounge, never alone.

But in the tiny bunkroom it seemed for a moment that a separate world existed.

When he finally got back to the bunkroom he found Lars poring over a checklist of supplies.

They stood watch and watch at the web controls, and came back to their upside-down bunkroom and ate sleep.

At mealtime I could not even look at food, but since the bunkrooms were so cold, I came over to the dining room anyway, went through the food line, and gave my food to some boys.

But under normal conditions the bunkrooms were used almost solely for sleeping, blastoff and landing.

Three Chimneys cannot properly be called more than a hostelry, not with only two bunkrooms and a single common room for eating.

The lake view from the bunkroom windows had been replaced by total whiteness.