chocolaterie
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From French chocolaterie.
Noun
[edit]chocolaterie (plural chocolateries)
- A chocolate shop.
- 2000, Robert Nelson Jacobs, Chocolat: A Screenplay, New York, N.Y.: Talk Miramax Books, →ISBN, page 38:
- The sheer nerve of the woman—opening a chocolaterie just in time for Lent.
- 2005, Teresa Berger, Fragments of Real Presence: Liturgical Traditions in the Hands of Women, New York, N.Y.: Herder & Herder, →ISBN, pages 202–203:
- It is telling, though, that there remains a fine line between the chocolaterie and the church. Vianne never enters the church, and the priest never tastes the chocolates in the chocolaterie.
- 2015, Myrl Coulter, A Year of Days, Edmonton, Alta.: The University of Alberta Press, →ISBN, page 58:
- A take-it-as-it-falls day, Valentine’s Day doesn’t move to the nearest Monday or Friday to create a long weekend. Whatever day of the week February the fourteenth hits is it. And it’s a get-up-and-go-to-work day, especially if your place of employment happens to be in the restaurant industry, or at a florist shop, or behind the counter in a chocolaterie. Love sells, so people have to work.
- 2017, Colette London [pseudonym; Lisa Plumley], Dead and Ganache, New York, N.Y.: Kensington Publishing Corp., →ISBN, page 3:
- That’s why, when I received a message that my one-time chocolate-making mentor, Philippe Vetault, was retiring from his Brittany-based chocolaterie, I jumped at the chance to attend his au revoir party.
Related terms
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- chocolaterie on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
French
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio: (file)
Noun
[edit]chocolaterie f (plural chocolateries)
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- “chocolaterie”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.