Getting Hotel Room Information in Spanish
Before checking in to a Spanish hotel, you’ll want to check it out to make sure it meets your needs and expectations. Seeing the hotel’s rooms before you check in is a particularly good idea if you’re coming to a city or town where the tastes and levels of cleanliness may differ from your own. The advantage of such hotels is that they are much less expensive than the ones you book beforehand.
Size up the following:
The closets: What do they look like inside?
The bathroom: Does it really have hot water, and does the toilet flush properly?
The windows: Where do they open to?
The water: Is it safe to drink?
When you visit any foreign country, always ask whether the water is safe to drink. You can never take the safety of your water for granted. Here are some phrases that will help you determine how safe the water is:
¿Es potable el agua del hotel? (ehs poh-tah-bleh ehl ah-gooah dehl oh-tehl) Is the hotel's water drinkable?
Sí, y también tenemos agua embotellada. (see ee tahm-bveeehn teh-neh-mohs ah-gooah ehm-bvoh-teh-yah-dah) (Yes, and we also have bottled water.
¿Dónde encuentro el agua? (dohn-deh ehn-kooehn-troh ehl ah-gooah) Where do I find the water?
Las botellas están en su habitación. (lahs bvoh-teh-yahs ehs-tahn ehn soo ah-bvee-tah-seeohn) (The bottles are in your room.)
Although the water may taste different in various regions of the United States and Canada, the water won't make you sick if you happen to swallow some of it when taking a shower or brushing your teeth. However, some countries don't treat their water to remove harmful bacteria as thoroughly as do the United States and Canada. Therefore, keep your mouth shut when showering, which may be hard to do at first.
In the following conversation, Andrea wants to be able to relax in her room. A bubble bath sounds good. But first, she needs to make sure that the room has a private bath and a tub. Otherwise, she may need to change her plans.
Receptionist:
La ciento diecinueve está en el segundo patio. Es una habitación preciosa.
lah seeehn-toh-deeeh-see-nooeh-bveh ehs-tah ehn ehl seh-goon-doh pah-teeoh. ehs oo-nah ah-bvee-tah-seeohn preh-seeoh-sah
One-nineteen is on the second patio. It’s a gorgeous room.
Andrea:
¿Tiene baño?
teeeh-neh bvah-nyoh
Does it have a [private] bath?
Receptionist:
Sí. Pase, por aquí está el baño.
see pah-seh pohr ah-kee ehs-tah ehl bvah-nyoh
Yes. The bathroom is this way.
Andrea:
¿El baño no tiene tina?
ehl bvah-nyoh noh teeeh-neh tee-nah
The bathroom doesn’t have a bathtub?
Receptionist:
No. Como hace calor, aquí la gente prefiere ducharse.
noh koh-moh ah-seh kah-lohr ah-kee lah Hen-teh preh-feeeh-reh doo-chahr-she
No. Because it’s hot, people here prefer to shower.
Andrea:
¿Hay agua caliente?
ahy ah-gooah kah-leeehn-teh
Is there hot water?
Receptionist:
Sí, hay agua caliente y fría todo el día.
see ahy ah-gooah kah-leeehn-teh ee freeah toh-doh ehl deeah
Yes, there is hot and cold water all day long.
Andrea is resigned to doing without her bubble bath; she’ll watch TV to relax instead. Of course, if she doesn’t check to make sure that the room has a TV, she may have to change her plans again.
Andrea:
¿La habitación tiene televisión?
lah ah-bvee-tah-seeohn teeeh-neh teh-leh-bvee-seeohn
Does the room have TV?
Receptionist:
Sí, tiene un excelente televisor. Está dentro de este mueble. Aquí está el control automático.
see teeeh-neh oon ehks-seh-lehn-teh teh-leh-bvee-sohr. ehs-tah dehn-troh dehl mooeh-bvleh. ah-kee ehs-tah ehl kohn-trohl ahoo-toh-mah-tee-koh
Yes, it has an excellent TV. It’s inside this cabinet. Here’s the automatic control.
Andrea:
¿Se puede ver canales en inglés?
seh pooeh-deh bvehr kah-nah-lehs ehn een-glehs
Can you get channels in English?
Receptionist:
Sí, hay muchos canales en inglés y también en español.
see ahy moo-chohs kah-nah-lehs ehn een-glehs ee tahm-bveeehn ehn ehs-pah-nyohl
Yes, there are many channels in English and also in Spanish.

Spanish Glossary
adjective
A word that describes a noun or pronoun, giving it specific attributes or characteristics.

Spanish Glossary
adverb
A word used to modify a verb, adjective, or another adverb by expressing time, place, degree, and so on. Many Spanish adverbs end in -mente.

Spanish Glossary
bartering
Giving goods or services in return for other goods and services, as opposed to the exchange of money.

Spanish Glossary
cardinal number
Any number used in counting or showing how many.

Spanish Glossary
comparative
A form of an adjective or adverb which indicates that one thing has some feature to a greater or lesser extent than the thing it is being compared to. Example: slower, more believable.

Spanish Glossary
conditional
A verb tense that expresses an action that should have, could have, or would have happened if the conditions were right.

Spanish Glossary
conjugate
To give different forms of a verb according to voice, mood, tense, number, and person. A conjugated verb is a verb that has been changed from its infinitive form to a form that agrees with the subject.

Spanish Glossary
consonant
Any of the letters b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, ñ, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y, z; the double letters ch, ll, and rr may also be considered consonants in Spanish.

Spanish Glossary
customs
1. The government agency in charge of collecting taxes or duties imposed on imported and/or exported goods. 2. The common social acts and conventions of a particular area.

Spanish Glossary
declare
To inform customs officials of any goods you’re carrying that may be taxable.

Spanish Glossary
definite article
Any one of the words el, la, los, or las used as adjectives to point out a specific noun.

Spanish Glossary
demonstrative adjective
An adjective that indicates or points out this, that, these, or those people, places, or things to which a speaker is referring.

Spanish Glossary
demonstrative pronoun
Replaces a demonstrative adjective and its noun.

Spanish Glossary
diminutive
1. Small. 2. A word that has been altered with a suffix to indicate a degree of smallness, often ending with -ito or -ita.

Spanish Glossary
diphthong
A complex vowel sound made by gliding from one vowel sound to the next within the same syllable.

Spanish Glossary
direct object noun
A sentence element that answers the question, Whom or what is the subject acting upon? and may refer to people, places, things, or ideas.

Spanish Glossary
direct object pronoun
Replaces a direct object noun and agrees with it in number and gender.

Spanish Glossary
duty
A tax imposed on imports, exports, or manufactured goods.

Spanish Glossary
future
Verb tense indicating an action to come.

Spanish Glossary
gerund
A verb form that ends in -ing and works like a noun. Spanish gerunds are also derived from verbs.

Spanish Glossary
haggling
Negotiations between a seller and a buyer to come to an agreement upon the price of an item for sale. The vendor typically proposes a high price while the buyer suggests a significantly lower price, and, through bartering, the two typically meet somewhere in the middle.

Spanish Glossary
imperative
A verb mood that indicates a command or request.

Spanish Glossary
imperfect
Verb tense indicating a continuing, uncompleted, customary, or simultaneous past action.

Spanish Glossary
indefinite article
Any one of the words un, una, unos, or unas used as adjectives to point out some person, place, thing, or idea, but not a specific one.

Spanish Glossary
indirect object noun
Answers the question To or for whom is the subject doing something? and refers only to people or beloved pets.

Spanish Glossary
indirect object pronoun
Replaces an indirect object noun, but is also used when the indirect object noun is mentioned.

Spanish Glossary
infinitive
The unconjugated form of a verb — dormir (to sleep), for example.

Spanish Glossary
interrogative adverb
An adverb used to ask a question.

Spanish Glossary
interrogative pronoun
A word that replaces a noun and is used to ask a question.

Spanish Glossary
market
1. (noun) In Spanish cultures, a traditional market is where vendors gather to sell their goods. Markets may be open or under a roof, and they offer a less formal shopping environment than typical supermarkets or grocery stores. Prices are usually negotiable. 2. (verb) To advertise and sell an item.

Spanish Glossary
mood
1. A characteristic of a verb that indicates the manner in which the action occurs. 2. A characteristic of a person that indicates the overall emotional state of that person.

Spanish Glossary
ordinal number
A number used to indicate order in a particular series.

Spanish Glossary
past participle
A form of a verb that expresses a completed action or a time gone by.

Spanish Glossary
possessive adjective
A word that goes before the noun that’s possessed in order to express my, your, his, her, its, our, or their.

Spanish Glossary
possessive pronoun
A word that replaces a noun and its possessive adjective and indicates ownership.

Spanish Glossary
preposition
A word that connects nouns to nouns, verbs to verbs, or verbs to nouns/pronouns and shows their relationship to one another.

Spanish Glossary
prepositional pronoun
A pronoun that serves as the object of a preposition and always follows the preposition.

Spanish Glossary
preterit
Verb tense expressing a past action or state.

Spanish Glossary
pronoun
A word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.

Spanish Glossary
reflexive pronoun
A pronoun used in conjunction with a reflexive verb to express that an action is performed by a subject on itself.

Spanish Glossary
reflexive verb
A verb that indicates that the sentence's subject is acting upon itself. Reflexive verbs require reflexive pronouns.

Spanish Glossary
stem-changing verb
A verb that requires an internal change in the vowel before the -ar, -er, or -ir infinitive ending in all the singular and third-person plural forms of certain tenses.

Spanish Glossary
subject pronoun
A pronoun used as a subject.

Spanish Glossary
subjunctive
A grammatical mood indicating uncertainty, desire, supposition, hypothetical and theoretical situations, or impersonal opinions.

Spanish Glossary
subordinate clause
A part of a sentence containing a subject and verb that can’t stand on its own but describes something in the larger sentence.

Spanish Glossary
suffix
Letters added to the end of a word that change its meaning, give it a different grammatical function, or form a new word.

Spanish Glossary
superlative
A form of an adjective or adverb which indicates that one thing has some feature to a greater degree than anything it is being compared to. Example: greatest, most honorable

Spanish Glossary
syllable
A word or part of a word pronounced with a single sound, usually consisting of a vowel and one or more consonants.

Spanish Glossary
tilde
A mark (~) used in Spanish over an n to indicate the ny sound.

Spanish Glossary
vowel
Any of the letters a, e, i, o, and u. The letter y is never a vowel in the Spanish language, unlike its use in English.