On Mon, 04 Apr 2005 15:12:58 GMT, Jose
wrote in ::
You pay for a service, you are in deed a customer.
Would you say the same for a doctor's patients, a teacher's students, an
agent's clients? The word "customer" implies a different kind of
pecuniary relationship than the other words, and that includes "guest"
when applied to a hotel.
While all customers may be guests, not all guests are customers:
Here's what Merriam-Webster has to say about it:
Main Entry:customer
Pronunciation:*k*s-t*-m*r
Function:noun
Etymology:Middle English custumer, from custume
Date:15th century
1 : one that purchases a commodity or service
2 : an individual usually having some specified distinctive trait
a real tough customer
Main Entry: guest
Pronunciation: *gest
Function: noun
Etymology: Middle English gest, from Old Norse gestr; akin to Old
English giest guest, stranger, Latin hostis stranger, enemy
Date:13th century
1 a : a person entertained in one's house b : a person to whom
hospitality is extended c : a person who pays for the
services of an establishment (as a hotel or restaurant)
2 : an organism (as an insect) sharing the dwelling of another;
especially : INQUILINE
3 : a substance that is incorporated in a host substance
4 : a usually prominent person not a regular member of a cast or
organization who appears in a program or performance
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