bodega

[ US /boʊˈdeɪɡə/ ]
[ UK /bˈə‍ʊdɡɐ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a small Hispanic shop selling wine and groceries
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Get Started For Free Linguix pencil

How To Use bodega In A Sentence

  • He then went into a bodega which is when I noticed that there were a few people watching with terrified faces. Party for Socialism and Liberation Stories
  • That mouthful of a title obliquely refers to a small business grants program it would establish to help bodegas stock produce and market healthy items, as well as funding local education campaigns to spur purchases. Tracie McMillan: Foodies in da ���Hood?
  • In increasingly Hispanic South Central L.A., tiny bodegas selling milk, diapers, and piñatas are replacing liquor stores.
  • In Latino communities, Goya products are widely available in neighborhood stores commonly known as bodegas, and in supermarkets they are often found in the ethnic foods aisle. NYT > Business Day
  • All of their confections are crafted using an old-fashioned European-style process and generations-old family recipes from Spain and Italy to create the magical blends of "chocolat" in the finest European tradition.www. bodegachocolates.com GBK Productions Goes Green for Their 2007 Oscar Gift Suite
  • The bakery serendipitously encountered on the road from Sebastopol to Bodega Bay with a wood oven, a cadre of jolly dyke bakers, and the most amazing fougasse California Dreaming No More
  • She has seen many clients start from nothing and build prosperous lives for their families through small businesses, including one client who started with a small "bodega" and now owns one of the largest grocery stores in Brooklyn. Fact Sheet On Eight Years Of Peace Progress And Prosperity A
  • Furthermore, since 2001 The bodega cultivate 100 Ha of Organic vineyards.
  • The result is a mingling of million-dollar condos and sleek wine bars with creaky, rent-controlled buildings and graffiti-pocked bodegas. Prospect Heights Edges Into Crown Heights
  • They get up and walk to the corner store, which Javier refers to, with due reverence, as a bodega. THE SAVAGE GIRL
View all
This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy