Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Wiktionary
n. A room in a home or hotel set aside for the use of visiting guests.
Wikipedia
Guest room or variants may refer to:
- Bedroom
- Hotel room
- The Guest Room, a novel by Chris Bohjalian 2016
- The Guest Room, original title of Serving Up Richard 2011 film with Ross McCall and Jude Ciccolella
- Guest Room, 2015 short with GLEE's Lauren Potter
- Guest Room, 2003 short Zachary Bennett, Katie Boland, Jeff Clarke
- Guestroom (album), album by Ivy 2002
- "Guest Room", song by The National from Boxer
Usage examples of "guest room".
A while after, equally perplexed, Joanne found herself in a tranquil, well-appointed guest room.
He was the boy who occupied the most distant guest room, the boy who drove her father’.
Father Leopoldo was only too well aware that he had cooked a very bad lunch for the guest room.
Then, Dominique from the bedroom, Roark from the guest room across the hall, would hear Wynand's steps pacing the terrace for hours, a kind of joyous restlessness in the sound, each step like a sentence anchored, a statement pounded into the floor.
The creamy stationery from his own guest room was dashed over with Maggie's hurried and beautiful scrawl.
She saw that the whiskey decanter in each guest room was filled, and towels were fresh for evening baths.
I really can't say how it came to be that Peabody's parents are even now tucked away in a guest room on the third floor.
The butler led me to a guest room and asked-a macabre toucb-about my luggage.