Enzian just educated me recently about the meaning of garni- a hotel without a restaurant.
meuble is a term used often with the Cortina hotels- does it mean the same as garni ?
And while I am asking silly questions- what does "ttt" mean ?
Thanks.
meuble ?
Recent Activity
View all Europe activity »
- 1 International Trains to Switzerland using Swiss Pass
- 2 2 days in Venice- where to stay –What to do- Help please!
- 3
Solo in Sicily - April 2013
- 4
My First Trip to Provence and Paris...Loved!!!
- 5 Wife's first trip to Europe. Set on Paris & Rome, Need 3rd destination?
- 6 Normandy on our own?
- 7
Paris in 8 days ALONE
- 8 Train tickets - Venice to Florence to Rome
- 9 Barcelona - eat, drink, dance.
- 10 The Adventure Begins.. Sarge56 in Italy
- 11 Alsace question. Itterswiller or Riquewihr, where to stay?
- 12
Paris May 23, 2013. What should I wear in Paris?
- 13 Tuscany Lodging - Ankhura vs. Terre di Nano
- 14 Ordering wine in Paris
- 15 Comfortable shoes to wear in Italy this summer and not look like a tourist
- 16 Essen and Nordrhein-Westfalen
- 17 When to exchange US dollars to Euros
- 18 Cinque terre or Como/Bellagio for day trip from milan?
- 19 Best way to get from Malaga to Gibraltar to Ceuta, Morocco?
- 20 Changing of the Guard
- 21 Florence & ____?____ with a 16 month old baby in September.
- 22 Where to stay in Glasgow and Edinburgh Scotland
- 23 FCO to Fast Train and Best way to travel back from Naples to Rome
- 24
UK Trip, Final Chapter
- 25 Provence & Cote d'Azur in late September...and the planning begins!



TTT means to the top which is a way of pushing up a thread so more will see it & respond.
Can't help with the rest.
And how do you "ttt" a thread ?
okoshi, you just did! Any time you post to a thread, it pushes it back to the top of the list on the left-hand side of your screen so more people see it. If someone types "ttt," they are posting solely to bring it back to the top.
meublé (with the accent aigu, which is I assume what you're asking about) means "furnished."
Meubles = furniture
SusanP

Thank you
In Italy, they use the term meuble for a small, family-run hotel, I think it's used about the same as you'd use pension or a B&B. I don't know why they use that term, as I don't think it is Italian, but I've seen it a lot (ie, the term hotel-meuble). It does have an accent mark on the e. I thought it was the same as a garni and that's what garni meant also, in Italian hotel lingo, but I'm no expert on Italian, that's for sure.