Wiktionary
n. (plural of coffeehouse English)
Usage examples of "coffeehouses".
The agas put on their best clothes and filled the coffeehouses, where they sat enthroned on soft cushions.
Moscow Song, burst into the Turkish coffeehouses, insult beys and send them sprawling on the pavement, do you think of the Christian cause?
And when she went out walking, thickly swathed in her silken veils and with her nurse, the old Moorish woman, gliding behind her, she liked to go past the coffeehouses, which were full of men, or down to the harbor with its robust porters and boatmen, or ou through the fortress gates, where shaggy, unwashed sweating peasants came in.
He would go to the coffeehouses and tell, with touching charm, of his life, of his sometime brilliance, of the distinguished ladies and the serenades and mandolin concerts in Zante.
Turkish quarter to some hanum, but to the Turkish coffeehouses, to the agas.
At night they reeled, well fed and drunk, into the coffeehouses, then swirled into the Greek part of the town and fired shots into the air, terrifying those who crouched behind closed doors.
The Turks wiped their knives clean and once more sat cross-legged in the coffeehouses, smoking their narghiles and listening with half-closed eyes to the chubby-faced Turkish boy as he sang in Ms womanish voice.
Turks wiped their knives clean and once more sat cross-legged in the coffeehouses, smoking their narghiles and listening with half-closed eyes to the chubby-faced Turkish boy as he sang in Ms womanish voice.
He described the wide boulevards in Belgium lined with trees, the Champs Elysses in Paris, the great coffeehouses in Vienna with their wonderful pastries and the nightlife of Berlin.
When you get drunk and sing the Moscow Song, burst into the Turkish coffeehouses, insult beys and send them sprawling on the pavement, do you think of the Christian cause?
On Broad Street were the cobblers' shops, the glass and china shops, the stores, the Greek coffeehouses and the grocery shops.