Coffeehouse Etymology - Search results - Wiki Coffeehouse Etymology
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A coffeehouse, coffee shop, or café is an establishment that primarily serves various types of coffee, espresso, latte, and cappuccino. Some coffeehouses... |
Barista (section Etymology and inflection) bə-RIST-ə, Italian: [baˈrista]; "bartender") is a person, usually a coffeehouse employee, who prepares and serves espresso-based coffee drinks and other... |
Arabic coffee (section Coffeehouse) coffee. In Cairo, Egypt, a similar ban was instituted in 1532, and the coffeehouses and warehouses containing coffee beans were sacked. Arabic coffee is... |
literally meaning 'American coffee' Coyle, Cleo (2009). Holiday Grind - a coffeehouse mystery. Berkley Publishing Group. p. 228. ISBN 9781101151143. Retrieved... |
History of coffee (section Etymology) European-style coffeehouse opened in Tokyo in 1888 and closed four years later. By the early 1930s there were over 30,000 coffeehouses across the country;... |
Dictionary Online, Coffee, noun, etymology, accessed 4 April 2024. Hattox, Ralph S. (1988). Coffee and Coffeehouses: The Origins of a Social Beverage... |
journalist Bernard Weinraub of The New York Times wrote about the Limelight coffeehouse, quoting Shepherd as using the term hippie while describing the beatnik... |
Coffee (section Coffeehouses) coffeehouses or cafés, establishments serving prepared coffee or other hot beverages have existed for over five hundred years. The first coffeehouse in... |
Bo's Coffee (category Coffeehouses and cafés) Bo's Coffee is a Filipino coffee and coffeehouse chain. It was founded by Steve Benitez in 1996 in Cebu City, Philippines. The company operates a total... |
coffee culture in the 1980s it began to spread worldwide via coffeehouses and coffeehouse chains. The caffeine content in coffee beans may be reduced via... |
Shabandar Café (category Coffeehouses and cafés in Baghdad) romanized: Maqha al-Shabander) is one of the oldest and most famous coffeehouses in Baghdad, Iraq. It is located at the end of al-Mutanabbi Street near... |
the term dyke is obscure and many theories have been proposed. Most etymologies assert that dyke is derived from bulldyke, which has a similar meaning... |
the top). "The starting point of Turkish coffee: Istanbul's historic coffeehouses". The Istanbul Guide. Archived from the original on 18 October 2020.... |
18th century Vienna and later most prominently used with the Thonet coffeehouse chair. Wicker has been documented as far back as ancient Egypt, made... |
Kafana (category Types of coffeehouses and cafés) kavarna shares neither its etymology nor its functionality with the Ottoman kahvehane, deriving instead from the coffeehouses of Vienna and thus not offering... |
Cappuccino (section Etymology) Italy until the 1930s. It is sometimes said to have been born in the coffeehouses of Trieste and other Italian areas of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in... |
Hybrid word (category Etymology) 'moveable' Beatnik – a 1950s counterculture movement centered on jazz music, coffeehouses, marijuana, and a literary movement, from English 'beat' and Russian... |
strained. This has often been called a meal in itself. As with downcity, the etymology of this term is unknown. One common, but unsubstantiated, explanation... |
stores and vending machines. Fresh-baked cookies are sold at bakeries and coffeehouses. In many English-speaking countries outside North America, including... |
Konditorei (category Types of coffeehouses and cafés) (1832–1914) Amaury Guichon (* 1991) Natalie Sideserf (* 1985) Bakery Coffeehouse Schlagobers, Richard Strauss' ballet, set in a konditorei "Berufs- und... |