For me, latter one is familiar. Booked in a room' makes sense. And what is the difference?
Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana Familypedia Fandom powered by Wikia
For more context, i'm trying to say something along the.
Booking out of a hotel is to leave;
Next is a bit of a slippery word. Or should i say, we are being. For instance, the secretary calls the hotel and asks to make a reservation in the name of her boss mr.cullen. From boogie, that also meant to move quickly, to get going;
Can i say i'm fully booked to mean that my schedule is full? I suppose it's functioning as an adjective here, but it can be an adverb (to come next), and sometimes it's a preposition itself. You could say of a fast moving car “it booked ”,. If i'm attempting to be booked to do an event, and i'm saying:
I do think there is a difference between 'in the name' and 'under the name'.
So i don't think we'd. I have been booked for a room the room has been booked. I forget what the word for 5 times is. I've always heard the booked verb applied to performative professions:
The two other passengers were close behind him, and about to follow. I would like to book annual leave on 08/08/2021 i would like to book annual leave for 08/08/2021 Which sentence should i use? The preceding passage is from.
We're now booking dates for such and such.
Thanks for the explanation for crimes, that one had more nuances to it that i didn't quite get. I know it is single, double, triple, quadruple but forgot what the one for 5 is. Is that proper usage of booking? Do i use on or for with a single date?