All the furniture in the coffeehouse is of the 1930s style, the dark wood and rare ornaments creating an aura of mystery and peace. |
|
Part of the Austrian way of life, the coffeehouse serves as a meeting place and a source for breakfast or a snack or light lunch. |
|
Expect to hear it in the future at your favourite coffeehouse or folk fest. |
|
Still deep in easy conversation, the two finished their drinks and left the coffeehouse. |
|
There was this little coffeehouse down a side street that we hung out in all the time. |
|
Coming from the comparatively sedate Toronto coffeehouse scene, the brothers were dropped into what must have seemed like a bacchanal. |
|
Austrian city dwellers often take a midafternoon coffee break at a national institution, the coffeehouse. |
|
A refined coffee with a soft, sweet aroma, it is ideal for those who wish to serve a refined gourmet espresso in their coffeehouse. |
|
Thus, in a coffeehouse near Foca, portraits of Mladic and Karazdic are exhibited without the least dissimulation. |
|
Take the atmosphere of an Italian coffeehouse to your own four walls or your workplace with the Lavazza Espresso Point EP 800 in black. |
|
In 27 Cafés d'Europe, in 27 European capitals, coffeehouse discussions will take place with the public and young people from all over Europe. |
|
The 800-watt J?800 is great for smaller coffeehouse gigs where you're amplifying a couple of guitars and a few vocals. |
|
In the morning, join the intelligentsia at cafe Pamplona, a European-style coffeehouse, also by Harvard Square. |
|
She suggested that Gregory stack newspapers on his desk to give the set an intimate, coffeehouse feel. |
|
The British Spectator speculates on its coffeehouse blog about a Rand Paul vice presidential nomination. |
|
Listen to the conversations around you — colleagues at the office, customers in the coffeehouse line, those who serve you, those you serve, the people you meet each day. |
|
She's a new-breed singer-songwriter, straddling the line between smart rocker and simpy coffeehouse philosopher. |
|
Every coffeehouse has some particular statesman belonging to it, who is the mouth of the street where he lives. |
|
In 1798, it was renamed the Athenaeum when it was rebuilt with a newsroom and coffeehouse. |
|
Ever since Le Procope, the world's first coffeehouse, opened its doors in 1686, countless artists, writers and eminent intellectuals have made the Left Bank cafés their regular haunts. |
|
|
Whether they're burning the midnight oil late at night doing homework or hanging out with friends at a local coffeehouse after school, coffee drinking has become popular with many teenagers. |
|
The Hotel's exclusive and unique character is also reflected in the fact that the world's most famous coffeehouse combines several coffee concepts under one roof. |
|
Nothing quite like the coffeehouse had existed before: a place where society and business could be conducted in comfortable surroundings and where anyone could go, for the price of coffee. |
|
Farewells is a mysterious story, narrated on behalf of the owner of a provincial coffeehouse, claiming to be a fine connoisseur of human psychology. |
|
Although many coffeehouse patrons were scholars, a great deal were not. |
|
This quaint coffeehouse in an alley is popular with locals and expat downtowners alike, and will be filled with an eclectic mix of people at any time of the day. |
|