MinGeonKim
Sweet room / Suite room. Hello, folks. In a hotel, I hear 'suite room' as 'sweet room' in Korea. do they have same meaning? or which one do you think I should get?
17. Feb. 2017 23:08
Antworten · 6
2
The pronunciation is exactly the same. They are completely different words. "Suite" means a set or a grouping. In a hotel, it means you are renting a group of connected rooms. In the US, last summer we rented a hotel "room" for $100 a night. When we opened the door, we saw a single room with two beds, two chairs, a small desk, a refrigerator, and a microwave, and a bathroom off to the side. The summer before, we were on a family Disney World vacation where several families shared a hotel suite which cost $500 a night. When we opened the door, we saw a big room with no beds. Part of it was a living room, with a sofa, a coffee table, and a TV set; part of it was a full kitchen with counters, cabinets, full-sized refrigerator, stove, and a dining table. Doorways from that room led to three bedrooms and two bathrooms. Hotels with "suites" as part of their name are hotels in which all of the accommodations are suites. They are popular with business people who are staying in one place for several weeks. You would not usually say a hotel room was "sweet." You would say it was "luxurious."
18. Februar 2017
2
Suite is indeed pronounced as sweet.
17. Februar 2017
1
Hi there, The pronunciation of "suite" and "sweet" are the same. A suite room is made up of two or more interlinked rooms. If I get the choose, I do not mind getting both a "suite" and a "sweet" room :) Cheers, Lance
17. Februar 2017
Well, I don't know what a "sweet" room is (unless it's code for something devious), but yes, "suite" is pronounced the same way. Personally, I don't have the kind of money to spend on a suite room. Just give me a clean room with a comfortable bed and I'm good =)
17. Februar 2017
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