English

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Etymology

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Shortened from earlier Hindu military hotel, named so because they originally catered to Hindu non-vegetarians of the military.

Noun

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military hotel (plural military hotels)

  1. (South India) A restaurant serving non-vegetarian food. [from mid-20th c.]
    • 1954, Large Industrial Establishments in India[1], Indian Labour Bureau, page 455:
      11 Gajendra Vilas Hindu Military Hotel, Alps Restaurant, Mount Road.
    • 1962, Jean Filliozat, India: The Country and Its Traditions:
      Mutton or chicken curries and various other non-vegetarian dishes are served in the Moslem restaurants and in those labelled in English "Military Hotel."
    • 2011 October 18, Shashi Tharoor, India: From Midnight to the Millennium and Beyond, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN:
      The Star of India, as the board outside proclaimed, was a "military hotel"; in other words, it served meat, which my grandmother did not. "I am thinking you might be missing it," Charlis said, ushering me to a chair.