croissanterie
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French croissanterie.
Pronunciation
Audio (US): (file)
Noun
croissanterie (plural croissanteries)
- A shop that sells croissants.
- 2000 October 15, Jane, “Gore Invented the Internet”, in misc.news.internet.discuss[2] (Usenet), retrieved 1 June 2022:
- Listen, we're in need of a change and know that European things (especially French) seem to work well in the States. I'm prepared to bring over my know-how and create a Croissanterie or a Cręperie if someone is willing to fund it and offer us (il)legal immigrant status. I'll wait for your responses...........
- 2001 February 25, Jack, “Looking for Paris Itineraries”, in rec.travel.europe[3] (Usenet), retrieved 1 June 2022:
- IMHO tourism today is based on exepriencing daily atmosphere, ambiences as much as on museum visits. Sitting on a terrace, watching daily life passing by, enter a croissanterie, a bakery,strolling through an open air market, drink quickly "un petit blanc" (glass of white wine), at the counter of the local bar, having a nap on a bench in the parc du Luxembourg, watch an amateur painter in a street of Montmartre....and finally go at night for a superb refined dinner for less than 200 FF per person!
French
Etymology
From croissant + -erie, 1970s.[1]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /kʁwa.sɑ̃.tʁi/
Audio (France, Saint-Maurice-de-Beynost): (file) Audio (Toulouse): (file) Audio (Vosges): (file)
Noun
croissanterie f (plural croissanteries)
- croissanterie (shop selling croissants and other fast-food)
References
- ^ croissanterie at the Google Books Ngram Viewer.