Occupancy
occupancy (noun) -
a. the act of living in a place (hotel room, apartment, house)
b. the number or percentage of people who live in place
occupied (adjective) - a person is currently living in the place
occupant (noun) - a person living in a place
occupy (verb) - live in a place
room occupancy
bed occupancy
occupancy of a home
occupancy of a hotel room
occupancy of a site
owner occupancy
an occupancy rate
push occupancy rates up
increase occupancy rates
decreasing occupancy rate
increasing occupancy rate
room occupancy percentage
room occupancy report
average occupancy
occupancy over the whole year
permanent occupancy
temporary occupancy
sole occupancy of a room
single occupancy
double occupancy
multiple occupancy
dual occupancy
low occupancy
high occupancy
free occupancy
increased occupancy rates
joint occupancy
income from occupancy
occupancy conditions in a contract
maintain records of the occupancy of the room
original occupant
current occupant
former occupant
previous occupant
present occupant
Example sentences:
* Many private hospitals have low occupancy rates.
* "In the decade from 1831, the average occupancy per house in Liverpool increased from 6.4 to 6.9."
* Sole occupancy of a room is occasionally possible, but the supplement is 100 baht.
* It seems reasonable to assume that the development will attain an occupancy rate much higher than that at present.
* A local authority has a responsibility to ensure that accommodation in multiple occupancy housing for use by the homeless is safe and suitable, such that occupants are not injured.
* "Hotel chains in Tokyo, Osaka and other large cities enjoy over 90 per cent occupancy, as visitors use the western-style hotels as urban resorts."
* "Most hotels maintain records of the occupancy of the room so that at any time they can refer to it and see when and by whom the room was occupied."
* "Each day the housekeeper of the hotel prepares a room occupancy report and from this the statistics on room occupancy, bed occupancy, rooms out of service and sleeper loss percentages are calculated."
* "The net costs of Eagle Lodges appear for the first time in the income and expenditure account and are largely attributable to setting up costs as there was little income from occupancy during 1990.
* The report predicts 1991 will see further declines in occupancy and achieved room rates.
* "Between 1970 and 1980 owner occupancy was only declining in Fineview, house prices were increasing throughout the area and the elderly population was increasing above the average rate in only half the neighbourhoods."
* "It is clear that a leisure centre can turn a Monday-to-Thursday out-of-town operation into a seven-day-a-week one and thus substantially increase occupancy rates."
* "The supplement per person per night: Double for sole occupancy (on request) 1225 baht; Front sea view 295 baht."
* "I'd pushed their occupancy rates up by 40 per cent by the time I left, and headed up a worldwide promotional campaign that got the hotel chain more free press exposure than ever before."
* "We had 80 per cent occupancy over the entire year, yet we're about 25 per cent down on budget for those occupancy figures."
* "There is evidence that the sale of holiday units as permanent residences is already beginning to happen where the temporary occupancy clause, which is customarily enforced on caravan and chalet sites, has been withdrawn for some reason."
* "To calculate the room occupancy percentage accurately, the number of rooms out of service (OSS) for any reason such as maintenance or redecorating must be deducted from the total number of rooms in the hotel."






