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Discover LudwigThe phrase "coffee corner" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use this phrase to refer to a designated area in a room or space where coffee, tea, or other hot beverages are served. For example, "The conference room has a cozy little coffee corner with a complimentary selection of drinks."
Exact(8)
It's a post from Tita Larasati about a trip she took last week to the Reading Lights bookshop and coffee corner in (appropriately enough) West Java.
We delivered our final recommendations in a manner that I think reflected our dedication and flexibility: while our client was waiting in between flights at a coffee corner in terminal 2G of Charles de Gaulle airport.
The coffee corner serves a mean chocolate brownie and is a good place to curl up with a book.
It has to be said our coffee corner resembles a grotty bedsit rather than a frontier of science.
The Sutton store sells to family-type customers, the Sheen store – half a mile from Richmond park, a honeypot for cyclists – is more upmarket, with a coffee corner, an upstairs therapy business, and a walk-in workshop.
A bas-relief replica of the Farmers Market clock tower stands at the entrance of what looks like a food court that also includes T&Y Bakery, the Coffee Corner, refrigerated shelves for "Farmers Market To Go" items and Bennett's Ice Cream, and kiosks for Magee's House of Nuts, Dragunara Spice Bazaar, the Dog Bakery and the Magic Nut & Candy Co.
Similar(52)
Proximity-aware services are offered at intelligent coffee corners where users are unobtrusively identified and authenticated while approaching.
Among the ways of doing that, she said, are holding regular social outings for employees, designating "coffee corners" where people can chat over breaks and creating peer-assistance programs that allow workers to discuss issues or problems in confidence.
Workers from different departments meet in the company restaurants and coffee corners.
Its Jerusalem office offers hope for what a Middle East of the future could look like: At the "coffee corners" on some floors the Israeli and Palestinian men look almost interchangeable, and they mix amicably with Christians and Druze, burka-clad Arab women and wig-donning ultra-Orthodox women, the latter of whom Intel is increasingly recruiting into its workforce.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com