Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel franchise - Who are the people who eat and live?

Who are the people who eat and live?

Guest.

1. People who buy things in stores are called customers. People who travel abroad are called tourists. People who take the bus are called passengers. People who eat in restaurants are called diners. People who stay in hotels are called guests. 6. People who drink tea in the teahouse are called guests. 7. People who burn incense in temples call customers. In ancient times, innkeepers often asked, "Do you want to stay in an inn or an inn?" Here "staying in a hotel" often means "eating" or "drinking tea", rather than "staying in a hotel". Shopkeepers and guests are outspoken, understanding and reasonable, and go their own way.

First, the tip is to send the tip of the tongue. Because people on the road are often in a hurry, they just go to the inn to eat a little, fill their stomachs and send their tongues away, so they are called tipping.

Second, the ancients used to call eating light food. Because there were usually two meals in ancient times, there was no lunch in the morning and afternoon, and sometimes I would eat a little when I was hungry at noon. In ancient times, flint was used for cooking and making fires, which was called striking fire. Later, it was passed around, because the glyphs were similar, and it was mistakenly written as pinch. Third, it comes from the argot in the Jianghu underworld. Because gangs walk in rivers and lakes, some words will be known if they are too obvious, so they will use some obscure words instead of normal words.