释义 |
Definition of ryokan in English: ryokannoun rɪˈəʊkanrēˈōˌkän A traditional Japanese inn. (传统的)日本式旅店 Example sentencesExamples - ‘We have had problems with foreign guests,’ said the manager of another ryokan, who said she would take overseas visitors only with a recommendation from a local company.
- The spring was duly found and the priest asked a disciple, a member of the Hoshi family, to open a ryokan.
- One of the city's oldest ryokan, it has only 19 rooms, each one perfection in understated style.
- Mr. Kawabata wrote the novel while staying in a small ryokan in Yuzawa Town, Niigata Prefecture (which now proudly refers to itself as ‘snow country’), in 1947.
- We're staying at a ryokan run by one of the covert ops.
- Upstairs is reminiscent of a Japanese ryokan, or guesthouse, and the former banquet room still contains the stage where Japanese officers were once entertained.
- Because every hotel and inn and ryokan and minshuku within a very large radius was fully booked for the two nights of the festival, Echo and I had booked a room in Nagatoro, about a half-dozen stops away on the old country line railroad.
- I tried to book our ryokan today, and the woman couldn't understand a word I said, and was a tad rude, and I had to hand the phone over to Tamura.
Rhymesawoken, bespoken, betoken, broken, foretoken, oaken, outspoken, plain-spoken, spoken, token, woken Definition of ryokan in US English: ryokannounrēˈōˌkän A traditional Japanese inn. (传统的)日本式旅店 Example sentencesExamples - One of the city's oldest ryokan, it has only 19 rooms, each one perfection in understated style.
- The spring was duly found and the priest asked a disciple, a member of the Hoshi family, to open a ryokan.
- ‘We have had problems with foreign guests,’ said the manager of another ryokan, who said she would take overseas visitors only with a recommendation from a local company.
- I tried to book our ryokan today, and the woman couldn't understand a word I said, and was a tad rude, and I had to hand the phone over to Tamura.
- Because every hotel and inn and ryokan and minshuku within a very large radius was fully booked for the two nights of the festival, Echo and I had booked a room in Nagatoro, about a half-dozen stops away on the old country line railroad.
- We're staying at a ryokan run by one of the covert ops.
- Upstairs is reminiscent of a Japanese ryokan, or guesthouse, and the former banquet room still contains the stage where Japanese officers were once entertained.
- Mr. Kawabata wrote the novel while staying in a small ryokan in Yuzawa Town, Niigata Prefecture (which now proudly refers to itself as ‘snow country’), in 1947.
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