prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
prettygoodword ([personal profile] prettygoodword) wrote2025-05-22 06:37 am

auberge

auberge (oh-BAIRZH; French oh-BERZH) - n., an inn or hostel.


Or sometimes a restaurant, because some inns also serve food, but more strictly it's a place to sleep for the night. Dictionaries wildly disagree on when this was taken on from French, ranging from the 15th to 18th centuries, which highlights that dictionary compilers have very different databases. The French word is taken from Provençal, with alberga/alberja attested from the eleventh century, which okay would technically be in Old Provençal, at which point it also meant an encampment/hut as well as inn, from a Germanic root (compare Old Saxon heriberga, army shelter, and Old High German heriberga, army headquarters) that also gave us harbor.

---L.
mount_oregano: portrait by Badassity (Default)

[personal profile] mount_oregano 2025-05-23 07:14 pm (UTC)(link)
The dictionary says it came from the Goths, but not which one. Spain had Vandals and Suebis, who were pushed out by the Visigoths, who set up a centuries-long kingdom in Spain and became the basis of Spanish nobility.
mount_oregano: and let me translate (translate)

[personal profile] mount_oregano 2025-05-23 07:55 pm (UTC)(link)
The English word, no doubt, because English had a close connection to France after the invasion and colonial occupation by William the Conqueror. Spain had a different trajectory for its linguistic roots with its own set of conquerors and occupiers.
mount_oregano: Let me see (judgemental)

[personal profile] mount_oregano 2025-05-23 07:57 pm (UTC)(link)
The Spanish-language dictionary from the Royal Academy says it came from the Goths.