post-house

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English

Etymology

post ("mail"; "network of horse couriers") + house

Noun

post-house (plural post-houses)

  1. Alternative form of posthouse
    • 1794, Charlotte Smith, chapter XI, in The Banished Man. , volume I, London: T Cadell, Jun. and W Davies, (successors to Mr. Cadell) , →OCLC, page 219:
      Late on the evening of their firſt days journey they arrived at a ſmall poſt-houſe, where travellers ſeldom remain longer than while they change horſes; []
    • 1824, Edward Hibbet, Narrative of a Journey from Santiago de Chile to Buenos Ayres in July and August, 1821:
      Whenever we came to a post-house, the troop of horses took to the yard instinctively, and each man seized a lassu and caught his own.
    • 1883, James Nasmyth, James Nasmyth, Engineer: An Autobiography, Harper & Brothers:
      His duty was to carry me to the next post-house, and there leave me to be carried forward by another similar conveyance.

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