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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
teahouse
noun
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Afternoons ended at the Gundy, the school teahouse, a short walk up the hill.
▪ And needless to say, in the tiny teahouse I was myself the proverbial bull in the china shop.
Wiktionary
teahouse

alt. a public restaurant that sells tea and light refreshments n. a public restaurant that sells tea and light refreshments

WordNet
teahouse

n. a restaurant where tea and light meals are available [syn: teashop, tearoom, tea parlor, tea parlour]

Wikipedia
Teahouse (play)

Teahouse is a 1957 play by Lao She. The play was first published in Shouhuo ('Harvest') in July 1957.

Usage examples of "teahouse".

The small settlement, to whose teahouses the monks went for their dissipations, was a landing-place for vessels plying back and forth across the lake, and the bawdyhouses buzzed with excitement when Kiyomori and his troopers arrived to surround it in a house-to-house search.

Eguchi, a short distance above the river mouth, was a village of inns, teahouses, and brothels.

The hard sandstone caprock had been cleaned of sediment and leveled near one edge, with a tastefully unobtrusive light aircraft hangar, a fiberglass control tower, changing rooms, and a modest teahouse.

At that second the blazing roof collapsed sending them reeling away to fall in a heap, the resulting gusher of sparks and embers turned into a flamethrower by the wind, blowtorching other houses, fences, and the next Teahouse.

Back in those days the okiya and teahouses in Gion were all linked by a private telephone system, and Yoko was kept busier than almost anyone in our okiya, answering that telephone to book Hatsu-momo's engagements, sometimes for banquets or parties six months to a year in advance.

Inside, there's a placid pond toward one end--the 777 is now so low that Randy can count the lily pads--a tiny Shinto temple hewn from black stone, and a little bamboo teahouse.

In the old days, a hundred years or more ago, every time a geisha arrived at a party to entertain, the mistress of the teahouse lit a stick of one-hour incense-called one ohana, or "flower.