emporium 的定义
plural em·po·ri·ums, em·po·ri·a [em-pawr-ee-uh, -pohr-]. /ɛmˈpɔr i ə, -ˈpoʊr-/.
- a large retail store, especially one selling a great variety of articles.
- a place, town, or city of important commerce, especially a principal center of trade: New York is one of the world's great emporiums.
emporium 近义词
market
更多emporium例句
- Maybe he has a real chance to break ground on his very own cannabis delivery app or a brick-and-mortar emporium, and to reach a much higher economic ceiling in the process.
- “The department store as an all-encompassing emporium is a product of the 20th century and a victim of the 21st,” said Cohen of Columbia Business School.
- Those who endure will understand that the key to success, as it was for the great emporiums of old, is building lasting relationships, customer by customer.
- In New York City, the high-end adventure outfitter Abercrombie and Fitch and the kitchen emporiums of big department stores did a bustling business in these new symbols of postwar meat consumption.
- He turns a visit to a prefab home emporium into a meditation on wealth as a path to spiritual legitimacy.
- And then came the day when they walked into the London workshop of a musical instrument emporium.
- The around-the-corner Emporium Pies supplies a variety of irresistible desserts.
- The firehouse is near the Food Emporium market where Tommy worked as the meat manager before he was called to the FDNY.
- It seems like Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium is a film which will live in infamy for quite some time.
- Mr. McSweeney had the bad taste to try to stick up our local drug emporium about half an hour ago.
- Shanghai is rapidly becoming the great commercial emporium of China.
- Before the bewildered orphan knew where he was, he found himself in the interior of Ibrahim's emporium.
- It was a most primitive emporium of a most primitive frontier.
- Solano, by the way, is the commercial emporium of this end of the province, for there is not a single shop in Bayombong.