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  • July 17, 2024
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Travel Tips

New Orleans’ charm, celebratory nature and authentic cultural heritage will win them over time and again. Find fast facts below that will help you familiarize yourself with the city of New Orleans.

Airports

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Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport
Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport is Louisiana's major commercial airport providing national and international flight service.

Language

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New Orleans’ unique culture comes with a language all its own. As a port city, New Orleans has served as a fertile home and gateway to the Americas, from the original Choctaw inhabitants of the region to the French, Spanish and African settlers that melded to create Creole culture and food. The cultures that comprise modern New Orleans have all brought their own language and colloquialisms to the table, and the city has shaped them to form new catch-phrases. From mistranslations to mispronunciations, learn to speak like a local!

Banquette: Sidewalk or elevated pathway.

Bayou: Choctaw for “small stream.” It’s a creek with a slow current that flows from a river or lowland lake, often through swamp areas and delta regions.

Cajun: Nickname for Acadians, the French-speaking people who migrated to Western Louisiana from Novia Scotia starting in 1755.

Cities of the Dead: New Orleans cemeteries. Because of the high water table, we spend the afterlife buried above ground instead of six feet under it. Elaborate monuments cluster together like small communities.

Directions: There’s no West, East, North or South in New Orleans. We head Uptown, Downtown, Riverside and Lakeside.

Fais-do-do (fay-doe-doe): Literally “Put the kids to sleep.” When Cajuns would celebrate, they brought the kids with their blankets so that the little ones could snooze while adults ate, drank and danced through the night.

Faubourg (Fah-bahg or foe-burg): As in “Faubourg Marigny.” Originally suburbs, they are now neighborhoods near the French Quarter.

Gris-gris (gree-gree): A voodoo good luck charm that protects the wearer from evil.

Gumbo ya-ya: “Everybody talking at once.”

Isleños (iz-lay-nyos or eye-len-yos): Literally “islanders.” In this case, Spanish settlers from the Canary Islands who began migrating to south Louisiana in 1799. Most are now fishermen, trappers and master boat builders in St. Bernard Parish.

Jazz: A mixture of African and Creole rhythms with European styles and instruments. Some say it was local barber Buddy Bolden who invented it in 1891.

Krewe: A carnival organization, as in Krewe of Rex and variation of the word “crew.” Members privately put on the balls and parades that make up Mardi Gras.

Lagniappe (lan-yap): A little something extra, like a free coffee or dessert or a few extra ounces of boudin.

Laissez les bons temps rouler! (lay-zay lay bon tohn roo-lay): “Let the good times roll.”

Makin’ groceries: Shopping from groceries. Its origins are a mistranslation of the French phrase for the same action.

Neutral Ground: A median. When Americans settled in New Orleans after the Louisiana Purchase, the Europeans and Creoles in the French Quarter were not thrilled. The Americans settled across Canal Street on the side opposite the Quarter, and the street became the “neutral ground.”

New Orleans: Pronounced “New or-lins” or “new or-lee-yuns” but not “naw-lins” or “new orl-eens.” Both the parish and the avenue are, however, pronounced “orl-eens.”

Parish: Equivalent of a county in the other 49 states.

Pass a good time: To live it up or party.

Picayune: An old Spanish coin that was 1/8 of a dollar. Connotes something small or petty.

Pirogue: A shallow canoe used in the bayous.

Pro bono publico: “For the common good,” motto of Rex, King of Carnival.

Secondline: The people who follow a brass band on the street while waving handkerchiefs in a circle above their heads. The second-liners also have a special shuffle step they do when following a band that is called “secondlining.”

Streetcar: The world’s oldest continuously operating electric street railway and now a National Historic Landmark. In 1835, a steam enginetrain ran from the Vieux Carré along St. Charles Avenue to the riverbend. Eventually, the line became electric and now locals ride the lines to work on the original electric cars.

Street names: We’ve got some strange pronunciation. A sampling:

• Burgundy (bur-GUN-dee)

• Conti (kahn-TIE)

• Calliope (kal-ee-OPE)

• Melpomene (mel-pu-MEEN)

• Tchopitoulas (CHOP-ih-too-liss)

• Clio (clee-oh but often misread as C-L-10)

Swamp: A low, marshy wetland that is heavily forested and subject to flooding.

Vieux Carré: Literally “Old Square” or “Old Quarter.” It refers to the French Quarter, the 90 city blocks that hold about 2,700 European and Creole buildings.

Voodoo: From voudun, meaning “god,” “spirit” or “insight” in the Fon language of Dahomey. Voodoo came from the West African Yoruba religion via Haiti, where African practices mingled with the Catholicism of French colonists.

Yat: A local denizen, so named for the Ninth Ward greeting “Where y’at?”

Transportation

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VisiTour Pass
Discounted pass available in several denominations that allows unlimited streetcar and bus rides for one, three or five days; available at VisiTour vendors.

Streetcars
Entertaining and excellent public transit on 6.5 miles of St. Charles Street, as well as Canal and Riverwalk lines; fare is $1.25 each way—exact change required if visitors do not have a pass. The riverfront line runs 2 miles between the Old U.S. Mint and the Riverview, while the new Canal line (with the red cars) runs a couple of routes—one to the Cemeteries and another to Mid-City/City Park.

Buses
The efficient bus system can take visitors almost anywhere in town they'd like to go. Fares are $1.25 and transfers are $0.25. It's just $0.10 to transfer to a streetcar.

Car
Parking can be tricky and streets are narrow, with many one way restrictions. Unless you must have a car, walking is recommended, which gives the opportunity to slow down and experience more of the Big Easy.

Weather

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New Orleans has a subtropical climate with pleasant year-round temperatures. Temperatures range from the mid 40's in winter to the upper 90's in the summer. Rainfall is common in New Orleans, with a monthly average of about five inches of precipitation.

Month Max MIN Avg. Rainfall % Sunshine
January  63 43 4.9 49
February 64 45 5.2 51
March 72 52 4.7 57
April 79 59 4.5 65
May 84 64 5.1 69
June 90 72 4.6 67
July 91 73 6.7 61
August 90 73 6.0 63
September 88 70 5.9 64
October 79 59 2.7 72
November 70 50 4.1 62
December 64 45 5.3 48