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The phrase "a cafe of" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe a type of cafe or a specific characteristic, but it lacks context to be usable.
Example: "I visited a cafe of unique design that caught my attention."
Alternatives: "a cafe with" or "a cafe featuring".
Exact(12)
The memories were written in 1918 on a table in a cafe of Northern France.
This fall, Mr. Rubin moved to Brooklyn, with a dream of a building a cafe of his own.
"Never a cafe of a small businessman," he said, adding that he has never damaged any property.
… — Jeff Gordinier Poetry Foundation: … But even in a cafe, of course, Cynthia Huntington finds that people are enmeshed in their own private worlds.
There are now 13 cafes around the country, with plans for many more, according to the project's co-director Sam Joseph, who started a cafe of his own in Bristol called Skipchen.
However, given the difference between the two ways of measuring fuel economy, a CAFE of 54.5mpg will be equivalent to an EPA combined sticker figure of around 36-38mpg.
Similar(48)
A gaunt and sallow man stood in the doorway of a cafe on 52nd St.
B.P. 34 is in a creek bed below a cliff where a Lebanese family serves thick coffee in a makeshift cafe of a truck and awning.
(There is also a cafe menu of less expensive burgers, pizzas and down-home dishes).
I'm writing this at a pavement cafe of my own.
In a ground-floor cafe of a midtown office building, my friend and I sat next to the floor-to-ceiling window over some coffee.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com