How to Use boardinghouse in a Sentence

boardinghouse

noun
  • Julie Adamo is Lulu, a young friend of Meg’s who drops into the boardinghouse.
    Marcus Crowder, San Francisco Chronicle, 16 Jan. 2018
  • Hines, 24, walked up to the ramshackle boardinghouse and gently knocked.
    Washington Post, 27 Oct. 2020
  • The action takes place over a 24-hour period, from one morning to the next, and never moves from the boardinghouse.
    Marcus Crowder, San Francisco Chronicle, 16 Jan. 2018
  • The rear of the boardinghouse faced the Lorraine Motel across Mulberry Street.
    The Washington Post, AL.com, 30 Mar. 2018
  • Here rest 350 victims, many of whom were killed in the Peshtigo Co. boardinghouse owned by Ogden.
    Christopher Borrelli, chicagotribune.com, 29 Sep. 2021
  • His widow, Sarah, lived in the house for 36 years, running it as a boardinghouse during and after the Civil War.
    Ann Banks, Smithsonian Magazine, 19 Aug. 2020
  • After the Diddens moved away from Capitol Hill, the house was turned into a boardinghouse.
    Kathy Orton, Washington Post, 23 Sep. 2022
  • Quite a career for a girl who grew up in a boardinghouse with her grandmother on the wrong side of Hollywood.
    Laura Demarco, cleveland.com, 6 May 2018
  • The sound of gunfire outside their cheap boardinghouse makes their children cry.
    Washington Post, 1 Oct. 2021
  • Holzer also said Lincoln was stripped of his clothes to check for other wounds when he was brought to the boardinghouse, yet the man in the picture is wearing a shirt.
    David Bauder, Star Tribune, 1 Oct. 2020
  • This former boardinghouse clings to the side of the mountain, sneering at gravity.
    Roger Naylor, The Arizona Republic, 6 May 2022
  • Gwynne Dacres is a copywriter who moves into a shady boardinghouse during the pits of the Great Depression.
    Molly Young, Vulture, 6 Aug. 2021
  • Driscoll lived in boardinghouses to avoid cooking and house cleaning.
    Elaine Louie, New York Times, 23 Feb. 2023
  • The humble farming locale included a few amenities such as boardinghouse that opened in 1845 and a gristmill on the Five Mile Creek.
    Alyssa Fernandez, Dallas News, 15 Aug. 2020
  • In May 1925, he was overcome by a gas leak in an Indianapolis boardinghouse.
    Ron Grossman, chicagotribune.com, 22 Jan. 2021
  • Her father was later a caretaker and her mother a laundress and the owner of a boardinghouse.
    David Stout, New York Times, 28 Nov. 2021
  • Some lived in sailors’ boardinghouses along the Hudson River.
    John Freeman Gill, New York Times, 2 June 2023
  • He was overcome by a gas leak in an Indianapolis boardinghouse in 1925.
    Kori Rumore, chicagotribune.com, 23 July 2021
  • The party is elsewhere in the boardinghouse where our heroine, Esther, a shy, plain woman of 35, sits in her room sewing corsets and camisoles for socialites and streetwalkers.
    Jesse Green, New York Times, 31 Jan. 2022
  • There are several reasons for this: the setting is along a very picturesque street, in a building that was once a boardinghouse that the original Mrs. Wilkes took over in 1943.
    Brekke Fletcher, CNN, 18 May 2017
  • The boardinghouse is gone, and soon the bank building that stands in that location will be taken down, too, for a new residential building.
    Matt McKinney, Star Tribune, 1 Apr. 2021
  • Standing alone in his spotlight, Hudson played the dozens of gamblers, drifters, drinkers, and saints who surrounded him growing up in a 1960s New York boardinghouse.
    Helen Shaw, Vulture, 17 Dec. 2021
  • There’s a classic scene where her boardinghouse girlfriends, in preparation for the big night, teach her to slurp spaghetti without spattering the sauce.
    Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor, 6 May 2020
  • The playful artists often painted directly on the boardinghouse's doors and wall panels, much as their French peers had done in artist colonies like Giverny and Barbizon.
    Nicholas Derenzo, Travel + Leisure, 30 Apr. 2023
  • In the Elmhurst area of Queens, for instance, many immigrant workers live in crowded boardinghouses where the virus is spreading rapidly.
    Nicole Daniels, New York Times, 29 Apr. 2020
  • After her parents divorced, Miss Ramey moved to Cincinnati, where her mother ran a boardinghouse.
    Emily Langer, Washington Post, 4 July 2017
  • The hotel, once a gentlemen's boardinghouse, is a paean to louche classicism, stocked with antiques and eclectic bric-a-brac that could have been scooped up on a European Grand Tour.
    Betsy Blumenthal, Condé Nast Traveler, 7 Nov. 2023
  • The story primarily follows Sunja, the only child of a boardinghouse owner, over the course of the 20th century.
    Shirley Li, The Atlantic, 16 Mar. 2022
  • The Duke Street property passed through many owners, serving as a hospital and boardinghouse.
    Patricia Sullivan, Washington Post, 8 Feb. 2018
  • But amid the Depression, his father had trouble finding a good job in the automotive trades, and his mother opened a boardinghouse to help meet expenses.
    Richard Goldstein, New York Times, 10 Nov. 2023

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'boardinghouse.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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