The sitting-room should certainly be as good a room as any in the house; as well located.
The bed-room should always be supplied with plenty, of fresh air, which "quiets the nerves" and helps one to sleep soundly.
Furthermore, the temperature of the bed-room should be lower than the temperature of rooms occupied during the day.
It is proper, therefore, that the delivery-room should be as clean as care can make it.
The sleeping-room should be so ventilated that the air in the morning will be as pure as when retiring to rest in the evening.
The benches or chairs for children in a school-room should be of such a height as to permit the feet to rest on the floor.
The bed-room should be quiet, well ventilated, and slightly warmed.
The temperature of the bed-room should not be lower than 70 degrees, and great care should be taken during cold weather to avoid chilling the child outdoors.
The sleeping-room should be capacious and well ventilated, and no curtains permitted about the bed.
The harness-room should have a wooden lining all round, and be perfectly dry and well ventilated.
Lilies, and some other very odorous plants, may perhaps give out smells unsuited to a close room, while the atmosphere of the sick-room should always be fresh and natural.
The sick-room should be kept at a temperature of about 65° Fahr.
The air in the sick-room should be kept as pure as possible.
The practical reasons which make it important that the windows in a room should be carried up to the cornice have already been given, and it has been shown that the lines of the other openings should be extended to the same height.
It may be noted in addition that while all doorways in a room should, as a rule, be of one height, there are cases where certain clearly subordinate openings may be lower than those which contain doors a deux battants.
No matter how elaborately the rest of the house is furnished, the appointments of the morning-room should be plain, comfortable, and capable of resisting hard usage.
Small one or two-hued projects in clay, designed to be used as a part of the decorative color scheme for a room should bear a contrasted, dominant, analogous, or complementary relation to the side walls of the room.
If our furniture is white and gold, it is clearly evident that the colorings of a room should be soft and harmonious.
A morning-room should be furnished as a small informal living-room, and the simpler style of the chosen period used.
The dining-room should be bright and cheerful and in harmony with the near-by rooms.
The dressing-room should be supplied with a light over the chiffonier and long mirror, and there should also be a table light.
The design and kind used in a room should be chosen with due regard to its suitability.
I am in hearty sympathy with the opinion expressed that "the management and spirit of the children's room should correspond to that of other departments of the library.
The work of the children's room should be educative, not reformatory.
In addition to this working space, every large children's room should have a locked closet, or better still, a work room opening from it.
The living beings in a room should be most attractive and conspicuous, and the dress of man should be of such a character as to secure this.
We commence by considering how rooms should be decorated; yet, in so doing, we are met at the very outset with a great difficulty, as the nature of the decoration of a room should be determined by the character of its architecture.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "room should" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.