[ UK /ˈɔːbəd‍ʒ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a hotel providing overnight lodging for travelers
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How To Use auberge In A Sentence

  • The editors of the Oxford English Dictionary etymologized, with evident dubiety, to the effect that aubergine is the diminutive of French auberge. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol II No 4
  • It is a replica of Auberge de Castile, a noted architectural landmark in Valletta Harbour.
  • The auberge is on the fringe of a village in the Morvan regional park, in the Burgundy region.
  • Any traveler knows that in France an auberge is an inn, but we are told in the O.E.D., on the alleged authority of the great French lexicographer, Littré, that in this fruity and enigmatic case, "auberge" is a variant of "alberge," a word for peach. VERBATIM: The Language Quarterly Vol II No 4
  • St John's was set up in 1998, after the current owner badgered the previous owner to sell his Irish pub to him, in order to give the UK a taste of the kind of foods he had experienced in the bistros, auberges and trattorias of Europe.
  • Only once did we abandon the beginners to ski to a remote auberge, Haute Combe haute-combe.fr, in the middle of the woods near Les Molliets. Couples ski holiday in the French Alps
  • auberge" for an inn has been used as an illustration, though the first syllable may be doubtful. Notes and Queries, Number 51, October 19, 1850
  • The tall and sinewy monk, without a moment's hesitation, dragged me up and half carried, half led me into a kind of auberge, or restaurant for the poorer classes. Vendetta: a story of one forgotten
  • The Old Schoolhouse Inn Similar to a French 'auberge', this inn offers an award-winning restaurant in an Area of O ... Ireland.com Breaking News
  • It has nothing of the sheer brio of L' Ancienne Auberge.
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