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coffeehouse

[ US /ˈkɔfiˌhaʊs/ ]
NOUN
  1. a small restaurant where drinks and snacks are sold

How To Use coffeehouse In A Sentence

  • It was also associated with the domestic, in contrast to the male, and very public, associations of coffee and coffeehouses.
  • Yunosuke and his wife, Katsu, had opened their first coffeehouse-style restaurant just after the end of World War II and named it ‘Benihana’ for the red safflowers that grew along the streets.
  • Towns we remember as sleepy are now humming with antiques shops and coffeehouses.
  • Neal Ascherson replies: I stand convicted of buying a thimbleful of coffee for Professor G.M. Tamás in a what-d'you-call-it ” maybe a coffeehouse? ” and I probably even repeated the offense in other such places. A Cup of Coffee
  • I learned a lot, made good money (great money for the area where I lived) for six months, fattened my bank account, and then fled for California, where I spent a month hanging out in coffeehouses. What a writer’s gotta do «
  • The Seattle coffeehouse bustled around them; his Austrian nose twitched at the odors. T2®: THE FUTURE WAR
  • In an article entitled "A New Haven for Beatniks," San Francisco journalist Michael Fallon wrote about the Blue Unicorn coffeehouse, using the term hippie to refer to the new generation of beatniks who had moved from North Beach into the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco. Archive 2007-10-01
  • ~ No coffee -- For Jürgen Habermas, the coffeehouse is a place where bourgeois individuals can enter into relationships with one another without the restrictions of family, civil society, or the state. Speedlinking 8/22/07
  • They perform frequently at weddings, coffeehouses, parties, and cafés throughout central New York, and for contradances across the country.
  • Proudly home to kitschy 1970s furniture and vintage wall hangings depicting Neil Armstrong, JFK and dogs playing poker, the independent coffeehouse Soma serves up lattes, mochas, macchiatos and regular cups of joe.
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