See also: Kursaal

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Borrowed from German Kursaal, from Kur (cure) +‎ Saal (hall).

Noun

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kursaal (plural kursaals)

  1. A public hall or building for the use of visitors at health resorts or spas; a casino
    • 1871, Ouida, Chandos[1], Reprint edition (Fiction), Elibron, published 2001, →ISBN, page 343:
      It was not the polished serenity of fashionable kursaals, the impassive languor of aristocratic gaming-tables, the self-destruction taken with a light word, of the salles of Baden, of Homburg, of Monaco; it was gambling in all its unreined fever, []
    • 1877, Charles Reade, chapter V, in A Woman-Hater[2]:
      Use your eyes, man. Look at the Kursaal, its luxuries, its gardens, its gilding, its attractions, all of them cheap, except the one that pays for all; all these delights, and the rents, and the croupiers, and the servants, and the income and liveries of an unprincipled prince, who would otherwise be a poor but honest gentleman with one bonne, instead of thirty blazing lackeys, all come from the gains of the bank, which are the losses of the players, especially of those that have got a system.
    • 1879, Henry James, chapter III, in Confidence, London: Chatto & Windus:
      Having brought it to a close, he took his way to the Kursaal. The great German watering-place is one of the prettiest nooks in Europe, and of a summer evening in the gaming days, five-and-twenty years ago, it was one of the most brilliant scenes.
    • [2001, Mies van der Rohe Foundation, European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture—Mies van der Rohe Award[3], Digitized edition (Architecture), Fundació Mies van der Rohe, published 2007:
      Kursaal is a German word for casino, and a cosmopolitan term that became popular in the Belle Epoque.]

Anagrams

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Italian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from German Kursaal.

Noun

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kursaal m (invariable)

  1. kursaal
  2. the letter K in the Italian spelling alphabet