livery stable
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A livery stable is a commercial establishment where horses, and often carriages or other vehicles, are kept and made available for hire or rent. Historically, it served as a place where travelers could rent a horse and/or a vehicle, or where individuals could board their own horses for a fee.
Usage
This term refers specifically to the business and its physical premises. It is a compound noun, and its meaning is directly tied to the historical service of renting horses and vehicles. - In the 19th century, a traveler arriving in town would go directly to the livery stable to hire a horse and buggy. - The city's last operating livery stable closed its doors in the 1920s with the rise of the automobile.
Advanced Usage
- The term can be used metaphorically or in historical fiction to evoke a specific time period or setting.
- The novel's setting, a dusty frontier town, was anchored by the saloon and the livery stable.
Variants and Related Words
- Livery: (noun) Can refer to the stable itself (a shortened form), but more commonly means a special uniform worn by servants or employees, or the distinctive design and color scheme used by a company (e.g., an airline's livery). The "stable for hire" meaning is now largely historical.
- Stable: (noun) A building where horses are kept. A livery stable is a specific type of commercial stable.
- Boarding stable: A modern equivalent where horse owners pay to have their horses housed and cared for, but without the primary business of rental.
Synonyms
- Hiring stable (less common)
- Hackney stable (archaic, specifically for hire horses)
Notes
- "Livery stable" is a fixed compound noun. The concept is largely historical in many parts of the world, as the service it provided has been replaced by car rental agencies, taxi services, and public transportation.
- Do not confuse with a simple "stable," which is not necessarily a commercial hire operation.
Noun
- stable where horses and vehicles are kept for hire