释义 |
‖ auberge|oˈbɛrʒ| Also 7 alberge. [Fr.:—alberge, earlier helberge, 11th c. herberge, a. MHG. herberge, OHG. heri-berga, lit. ‘army-shelter,’ camp, tent, inn: cf. G. herberge, and harbour.] An inn, a place of accommodation for travellers.
1615G. Sandys Trav. 195 The alberges of the Knight Hospitallers of St. Johns. 1777Shuckburgh in Phil. Trans. LXVII. 533 We had dined in a most miserable auberge. 1871Tyndall Fragm. Sc. II. i. 2 At an auberge near the foot of the Rhone glacier. Hence ‖ auberˈgiste, keeper of an auberge. † auˈbergical a. (nonce-wd.).
1775H. Walpole Lett. C'tess Ossory I. 178 Some tender swain had written..his fair one's name in this usual aubergical exclamation. 1766Smollett Trav. 25 The aubergistes impose upon us shamefully. |