We stayed overnight at a ski chalet.
a mountain chalet for weekend getaways
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The former Duchess of York has been hiding out at a luxury ski chalet in Austria, which reportedly costs around $2,700 per night.—Allison Degrushe, StyleCaster, 24 May 2026 Specifically created for the Asics trail team, the basecamp consists of a chalet that can host around 10 athletes at a time, offering a home away from home with direct access to some of the world’s most challenging trail running routes and an in-house gym.—Stephen Garner, Footwear News, 20 May 2026 His body was located Saturday afternoon near a road connecting two chalets in the northwestern part of the mountainous area around half an hour by road out of Sofia.—CBS News, 19 May 2026 The style icon's wedding to actor and director Ferrer took place in a private mountain chalet in Switzerland.—Julie Tremaine, PEOPLE, 17 May 2026 See All Example Sentences for chalet
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from French, borrowed from Franco-Provençal of Switzerland (and adjacent Alpine regions of France and Italy) tsalẹ̀, tchalè "cabin in upland summer pastures used as a residence and for processing milk into butter and cheese, pasture in the vicinity of such a structure," from tsal-, tchal-, stem probably meaning "shelter" seen as an underived noun in Old Occitan cala "cove, inlet" (also in Spanish & Catalan, and as a loanword from Spanish in Italian & Portuguese, probably a borrowing from a western Mediterranean substratal language) + -ẹ̀, -è-et entry 1
Note:
A display of the variants found in Franco-Provençal of Switzerland can be seen in Glossaire des patois de la Suisse romande (tome 3, p. 270). The word occurs as chaletus in Latin documents from present-day Vaud canton beginning in the fourteenth century. As chalet the word is first attested in metropolitan French in 1723; it received wide circulation through its use in Jean-Jacques Rousseau's novel Julie ou la Nouvelle Héloïse (1761).