inn
suomi-englanti sanakirjainn englannista suomeksi
majatalo
Substantiivi
Verbi
inn englanniksi
Any establishment where travellers can procure lodging, food, and drink.
(syn)
(RQ:Irving Tales of a Traveller)
(RQ:Churchill Celebrity)
A tavern.
One of the colleges (societies or buildings) in London, for students of the law barristers.
(ux)
The town residence of a nobleman or distinguished person.
(RQ:Spenser Shepheardes Calender)
(RQ:Spenser Faerie Queene)
To take lodging; to lodge or house oneself.
(RQ:Addison Freeholder)
''circa'' 1570, Foxe, ''A. & M.'' (1596), 1554/2:
- We inned at the signe of the Swan.
1606, ''Sir G. Goosecappe'' I, iii, in Bullen ''O. Pl.'' III:
- I never innd in the Towne but once.
{{quote-text|en|year=1726|title=Brice's Weekly Journal|section=18 February, 3
{{quote-text|en|year=1885|author=M. J. Colquhoun|title=Primes in Indis|section=I, xiv, 217
To lodge or house (someone or something).
{{quote-book|en|year=2018|origyear=1607|author=Thomas Middleton|title=Michaelmas term and a trick to catch the old one|publisher=Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG|isbn=9783111392158|page=27
1710, ''New Map Trav. High Church Apostle'', 7, quoted in 1901, James Augustus Henry Murray, ''A New English Dictionary on Historical Principles: part 1. H (1901)'', page 309:
- These Inn'd themselves all Night in Knights-bridge Fields.
(obsolete spelling of)
(romanization of)
(non-gloss).
(alt form)
c. 992, of Eynsham|Ælfric, "On the Festival of St. Peter the Apostle"
- (quote)
c. 990, (w), Matthew 25:35
c. 990, (w), Matthew 7:13
(l)
the (definite article)
(rfdef)
(topics) night