shopfront
IPA: ʃˈɑpfrʌnt
noun
- The side of a shop that faces the street, usually having display windows.
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Examples of "shopfront" in Sentences
- The shopfront is topped by a thin cast iron balcony.
- Villages became huts with the occasional 'shopfront' or bar.
- The chain may be notable, but an individual shopfront is not.
- The group's name was taken from a mini cab shopfront in London.
- He chose a tiny shopfront in the suburb of Rozelle as the location.
- The ground floor has a modern shopfront which does not face the street.
- Still 'shopfront' is certainly a puzzler in any thirteenth century context.
- The shopfront appearance means it is easier to access the information you want.
- In 1989 she moved to larger premises with a shopfront in the old town of Berne.
- As the city's temporary façade, the big shopfront windows are also reflective of its mood.
- The understated white-painted shopfront on Candlemaker Row belies the bold, enthralling worlds that lie behind it.
- Helter Skelter, Murder One and several other specialists lost their shopfront presence and made way for more coffee retailers.
- Through a tiny white shopfront you enter an invitingly cluttered interior containing thousands of books flying off in every direction.
- Both sites are content sites and therefore, we are spared the issues involved with maintaining a shopfront and dealing with payment gateways, etc.
- Despite the Cotswold stone, Dickensian shopfront and flagstone floors, the books spilling out from every corner will bring you right back to the present.
- The listed shopfront, with its soaring pediment and old-fashioned windows, gives on to a long, spacious area with modern fittings and a broad range of reading material.
- On Willesden High Road, the Architecture Association has recruited an advent calendar's worth of local shops and teamed them up with fashionable design studios, opening a revamped shopfront every day of December.
- The iPad's iBooks store was expected to be an excellent shopfront for ebooks, but sales have been slower than publishers expected, with Amazon's Kindle instead winning more acceptance – and attention – from readers.
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