cakeshop
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See also: cake shop
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]cakeshop (plural cakeshops)
- Alternative form of cake shop
- 1904–1907 (date written), James Joyce, “(please specify the story)”, in Dubliners, London: Grant Richards, published June 1914, →OCLC:
- As he did not wish their last interview to be troubled by the influence of their ruined confessional they met in a little cakeshop near the Parkgate.
- 1962, James Gindin, Postwar British Fiction: New Accents and Attitudes[1], University of California Press, page 75:
- The girl and the young man’s first wife, accepting the male’s infidelity without scenes or recriminations, finally agree to start a cakeshop in another basement and leave the young man to his newest mistress.
- 2009, Dani Cavallaro, Anime and the Visual Novel: Narrative Structure, Design and Play at the Crossroads of Animation and Computer Games, McFarland & Company,, →ISBN, page 87:
- …disquieted by the discovery that on the very spot where she expected to find a small familiar cakeshop, a large bookstore now stands instead.