Tavern
Middle English: from Old French taverne, from Latin taberna ‘hut, tavern’. Compare with tabernacle.
wiktionary
From Middle English taverne, from Old French taverne(“wine shop”), from Latin taberna(“inn”). Doublet of taberna and taverna.
etymonline
tavern (n.)
late 13c., "wine shop," later "public house" (mid-15c.), from Old French taverne (mid-13c.) "shed made of boards, booth, stall," also "tavern, inn," from Latin taberna "shop, inn, tavern," originally "hut, shed, rude dwelling," possibly [Klein] by dissimilation from *traberna, from trabs (genitive trabis) "beam, timber," from PIE *treb- "dwelling" (source also of Lithuanian troba "a building," Old Welsh treb "house, dwelling," Welsh tref "a dwelling," Irish treb "residence," Old English ðorp "village, hamlet, farm, estate"). If so, the original meaning probably was "wooden shed."