café
coffee


Etymology
The Spanish word 'café' (meaning 'coffee') has an interesting journey through several languages before arriving in Spanish. It originated from the Classical Arabic word 'qahwah', which then entered Turkish as 'kahve'. From Turkish, it made its way into Italian as 'caffè', and finally into Spanish as 'café'. This path reflects the historical spread of coffee itself, which originated in the Arab world and gradually spread throughout Europe through trade routes, particularly through the Ottoman Empire and Mediterranean trade centers like Italy.
Related Spanish Words
The word 'café' is actually one of the simpler and more common words in Spanish vocabulary. It's used not only for the beverage 'coffee' but also for 'coffee shop' or 'café'. Related Spanish words include 'cafetería' (cafeteria), 'cafeína' (caffeine), and 'cafetero/a' (coffee grower or coffee pot).
Related English Words
English speakers will find it easy to remember 'café' as it's identical to the English word 'café' (meaning coffee shop), which was borrowed from French. Other related English words include 'coffee', 'caffeine', and 'cafeteria'. While the English word 'coffee' looks slightly different from Spanish 'café', they share the same Arabic origins, with English receiving the word through Dutch 'koffie'.
Etymology is one of the fastest ways to learn Spanish, and Bueno Spanish is built around it.
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