Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
inn .
Etymologies
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Examples
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They were used by affluent travelers to avoid staying in inns, which were prone to vermin and vice.
One World, Under God 2009
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They were used by affluent travelers to avoid staying in inns, which were prone to vermin and vice.
One World, Under God 2009
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The torture of sleeping on a valise on the ground for weeks at a stretch was -- so an officer declared -- much the same as that produced by some beds in Irish inns -- after lying down for some hours, you have to get up and take a rest!
South Africa and the Transvaal War, Vol. 2 (of 6) From the Commencement of the War to the Battle of Colenso, 15th Dec. 1899 Louis Creswicke
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As to the fare offered in English inns, as compared with that of the
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There was only one table in the room, as is customary in English inns, and it had the disadvantage that it collected those seated at it into one party.
Something New 1928
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In the corner of the room there was a timid fire -- of the kind usually met in English inns -- imprisoned behind a grill that had been set up stoutly to confine a larger and rowdier fire.
Chimney-Pot Papers Fritz August Gottfried Endell 1906
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That of being conducted (down a little staircase carpeted with stair cloth) through the basement of a colossal hotel, with all the electric light turned on at midday -- a basement with lumber-rooms full of rather tawdry antiquities giving off its corridors, and other antiquities (as we see them in Italian inns) crammed against walls and into corners.
The Spirit of Rome Vernon Lee 1895
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We know from Shakespeare's plays that the different rooms in English inns had names.
Home Life in Colonial Days Alice Morse Earle 1881
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As for the landing, which in most Tyrolean inns is the cleanest and smartest place in the house, it is the dreariest wilderness of old furniture, old presses, old saddles and harness, sacks, undressed skins, and dusty lumber of all kinds, that was ever seen or heard of outside the land of the Don.
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I wonder, above all, why it is the great feature of domestic architecture in Italian inns, that all the fire goes up the chimney, except the smoke!
Pictures from Italy Charles Dickens 1841
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