¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Teashops
1. teashop [n] - See also: teashop
Lexicographical Neighbors of Teashops
Literary usage of Teashops
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A New Book about London: A Quaint and Curious Volume of Forgotten Lore by Leopold Wagner (1921)
"It goes without saying that they constitute the chief support of the teashops.
Light-refreshment resorts round the West End, or even in Central London, ..."
2. A New Book about London: A Quaint and Curious Volume of Forgotten Lore by Leopold Wagner (1921)
"It goes without saying that they constitute the chief support of the teashops.
Light-refreshment resorts round the West End, or even in Central London, ..."
3. Books on the Table by Edmund Gosse (1921)
"Later, on a second visit, I felt as much as Mr. Lucas does the squalor and the
commercialism of Ross, which, for all its teashops and its postcards, ..."
4. More that Must be Told by Philip Gibbs (1921)
"This average Englishman, as I met him in tramcars, teashops, and other places of
middle-class circumstance, was mightily perplexed about the whole business, ..."
5. More that Must be Told by Philip Gibbs (1921)
"This average Englishman, as I met him in tramcars, teashops, and other places of
middle-class circumstance, was mightily perplexed about the whole business, ..."
6. Lake District by Norman Buckley (2004)
"... served with shops, hotels and a small number of cafés/teashops. The lake is
almost 1.5km (1 mile) in length, with a wooded island adding to its charm. ..."
7. The Chinese Repository edited by Elijah Coleman Bridgman, Samuel Wells Willaims (1844)
"... but the greatest proportion w.ere clustered together in stupid terror round
the teashops, and at the entrance of the narrow streets. ..."
8. The Jubilee Story of the China Inland Mission by Marshall Broomhall (1915)
"... determined to resist, and the success of this official in worsting the foreigner
and his Consul soon became the talk of all the local teashops. ..."