"Motel" is a contraction of "motor hotel." The term motor hotel originated with 
the idea of a hotel that you drove up and parked outside the door to your room. 

So, the original defining characteristic of a motel is a hotel with doors 
opening outside to the parking lot. 

Today, many motels are multi-story, and some have rooms facing an interior 
courtyard, but I'd still call them motels, and retain the term "hotel" for 
lodging facilities with rooms opening to an interior hallway. 

Fun fact: the word "hotel" is descended from the middle French word "hostel," 
and both words are in active use in modern French, but with slightly different 
meanings. 

-Jack

-- 
Typos courtesy of fancy auto spell technology

On March 9, 2019 8:41:38 AM CST, Brian Stromberg <[email protected]> 
wrote:
>The only clear definition that has come across this list is whether the
>rooms open to the outdoors or to a hallway. All of the others are way
>too
>subjective to be useful to anyone trying to decide how to tag it.
>
>--
>Brian
>
>
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