Ger (yurt) shaped restaurant
A restaurant with Mongol
ger (aka '
yurt') shape:
. There is a Chinese round table inside.
More about ger/yurt: "
Yurt – originally from a Turkic word referring to the imprint left in the ground by a moved yurt, and by extension, sometimes a person's homeland, kinsmen, or feudal appanage. The term came to be used in reference to the physical tent-like dwellings only in other languages. In modern Turkish the word "yurt" is used as the synonym of "homeland" or a "dormitory". In Russian the structure is called "yurta" (юрта), whence the word came into English.
гэр (transliterated: ger, [ˈɡɛr]) – in Mongolian simply means "home".[1][2]
тирмә (transliterated: tirmä) is the Bashkir term for yurt.
киіз үй (transliterated: kïiz üy, [kɘjɘz ʉj]) – the Kazakh word, and means "felt house".
боз үй (transliterated: boz üy, [bɔz yj]) – the Kyrgyz term is meaning "grey house", because of the color of the felt.
ak öý and gara öý ([ɑk œj, ɡɑˈrɑ œj]) – In Turkmen the term is both literally "white house" and "black house", depending on its luxury and elegance.
qara u'y or otaw ([qɑrɑ́ ʉj, uʊtɑ́w]) – in Qaraqalpaq the first term means "black house", while the second means "a newborn family" and is used only to name a young family's yurt.
"Kherga"/"Jirga" – Afghans call them.
"Kheymah" (خیمه/ख़ॆमा) is the word for a yurt or a tent like dwelling in India and Pakistan, from the Hindi/Urdu (and Persian) :خیمه
In Persian yurt is called chador (چادر), in Tajik the names are yurt, khona-i siyoh, khayma (юрт, хонаи сиёҳ, хайма).
өг (ög, Tuvan pronunciation: [œɣ]) is the Tuvan word for yurt.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yurt#Etymology_and_synonyms https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_Attribution-ShareAlike_3.0_Unported_License.