It may perhaps be well to mention that the Locanda d'Italia, at Anagni, recommended in various guide-books, has ceased to exist for some years.
My locanda lay in the narrow and gloomy street of the Jesuits.
A locanda stands opposite the convent, a rare phenomenon in the country districts of Corsica.
It was a young man who had given himself out in the locanda for a Marseillese, had played the fine gentleman, and, in the end, could not pay his bill.
We have set up a locanda here for the season at the wells, and have made very little by it.
The locanda was an immense, cavernous room divided into front and back by a partition about seven feet high with an opening in the middle.
It was late in the afternoon of the next day before the cumbrous coach rolled up to the door of the Locanda del Sole in Aquila, and Prince Saracinesca found himself at his destination.
So they parted, and the Prince had a solitary supper of pigeons and salad in the great dusky hall of the Locanda del Sole, while his horses were being got ready for the long night-journey.
In fact, through a singular accident, for about a month the Locanda del Sol had been completely shorn of its old brilliancy, and the landlord did not know any reason for its eclipse.
At the first stroke of eleven more than two hundred customers occupied the Locanda del Sol.
This house was known--and probably is still known, unless an earthquake or a fire has caused this rookery to disappear from the face of the earth of Valparaiso--by the name of the Locanda del Sol.
The Locanda del Sol, owing to the changes it underwent, was in a few moments completely metamorphosed into a club.
And in less than an hour the strangers from Venice heard two voices below in the entrance of the locanda inquiring for two Venetian ladies who had recently arrived in Ravenna.
Thus the two young men went together to the locanda de' Tre Re to execute the commission entrusted to his nephew by the Marchese Lamberto.
At the locanda there was by chance one bed, which not being large enough for three, I slept on the floor.
Bread and cheese, or other provisions, must be taken, as the little locanda supplies absolutely nothing eatable in the way of food; although they probably have some of the good red country wine, for which Tallano is celebrated.
Cagliostro reached Rome for the last time in May, 1789, and after staying for a short time at the Locanda della Scalinata in the Piazza di Spagna he took a private house in the Piazza Farnese.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "locanda" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.