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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a room at a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a specific room in a particular location, often in the context of accommodations or venues.
Example: "I would like to book a room at a hotel for my vacation next month."
Alternatives: "a room in a" or "a room within a".
Exact(60)
On the morning of 10 October, Fanny Imlay was found dead in a room at a Swansea inn, along with a suicide note and a laudanum bottle.
Recently, anticipating snow, he booked a room at a Marriott near the courthouse.
It's like staying in a room at a fine French hotel, which you cannot afford either.
On many nights, he slept in a room at a television station where he worked.
His company puts him up seven to a room at a nearby inn, he said.
A young man enumerates the objects in a room at a summer place in Maine.
A social worker had already found her a room at a Manhattan shelter.
I booked them a room at a lovely hotel on 57th Street near Seventh Avenue.
By then she had taken a room at a hostel on Amsterdam Avenue in Manhattan.
Ms. Norden eventually got her a room at a YMCA, where she lives now.
(In London it will be performed in a room at a hotel near the Barbican).
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