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A small restaurant serving beer and wine as well as food
Answer for the clue "A small restaurant serving beer and wine as well as food ", 9 letters:
brasserie
Alternative clues for the word brasserie
Word definitions for brasserie in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
brasserie \brasserie\ n. a small restaurant serving beer and wine as well as food; usually cheap.
Usage examples of brasserie.
On Sunday they had not been out until near the end of the afternoon, to have dinner at a brasserie in the Place des Ternes, a good way from home, as if to move on to strange ground.
For lack of time to have dinner, had he followed the tradition and had sandwiches and glasses of beer sent up from the Brasserie Dauphine?
Half an hour later, when Maigret was in the middle of dinner, he caught sight of the waiter from the Brasserie Dauphine with a tray covered with a napkin.
When he entered the brasserie with Ruzena and, opposite the checkroom, saw his enlarged photo on a poster left over from the last concert, he was gripped by a sensation of anxiety.
He said that they should take another ride in the country, for this brasserie table was separating them like a wall.
Frantisek was still behind the tree in the park with his eyes fixed on the brasserie window.
While he had been hesitating, she and her friend had already gotten so far from the brasserie that Jakub would not even know in what direction to look for her.
Lucas appeared, sweating, having taken time to swallow a glass of beer at the Brasserie Dauphine before coming up.
At half past eight this taxi stopped in front of a brasserie near the Gare du Nord, facing the big clock.
Leaving his door open, he went down behind them into the restaurant, walked behind them past the shop-fronts of the Rue Neuve, and entered the same brasserie, apparently as calm and resolute as ever.
Mercier, who nodded, and the three of them were presently installed in a brasserie where a game of billiards was going on.
While the lawyer called in here, Maigret found his way into a brasserie where they served the best brown ale in the whole department.
He went to the Brasserie des Suisses and spent a quarter of an hour uninterestedly watching a game of backgammon at the next table.
He signed a few papers on behalf of the Big Chief, went to have a drink at the Brasserie Dauphine with a colleague from the Records Office, and then rode home by bus.
The windows of the brasserie were open, and a depleted orchestra was playing inside.