specifically: one specializing in Hispanic groceries
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Apothecaries, Bodegas, and Boutiques
Apothecary, bodega, and boutique may not look very similar, but they are all related both in meaning and in origin. Each of these words can be traced back to a Latin word for “storehouse” (apotheca), and each one refers in English to a retail establishment of some sort. Although bodega initially meant “a storehouse for wine,” it now most commonly refers to a grocery store in an urban area, especially one that specializes in Hispanic groceries. Boutique has also taken on new meanings: its first sense in English (“a small retail store”) is still current, but it now may also denote “a small company that offers highly specialized products or services.” Of the three words, apothecary has changed the least; it has gone from referring solely to the person who sells drugs or medicines to also naming the store where such goods are sold.
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The sequence in Episode 2, when the bodega is raided and people are dragged away by the Anti-Vigilante Task Force, that was filmed before Los Angeles, before Minnesota — before all of it.—Tracy Brown, Los Angeles Times, 6 May 2026 Across New York, small grocery stores, bodegas, and neighborhood coffee shops are more than just businesses.—Francisco Marte, New York Daily News, 29 Apr. 2026 Councilmembers deemed the metal gates — the ones that cover the front of basically every bodega, bank, and laundromat — unsightly and a magnet for graffiti.—Clio Chang, Curbed, 28 Apr. 2026 Time to take our spoon to the next bodega.—Neil Senturia, San Diego Union-Tribune, 27 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for bodega
Word History
Etymology
Spanish, from Latin apotheca storehouse — more at apothecary