What is another word for supermarkets?

Pronunciation: [sˈuːpəmˌɑːkɪts] (IPA)

Supermarkets, also known as grocery stores or food marts, are retail establishments that offer a wide range of products including fresh produce, meat, dairy, bakery items, and household essentials. They are a convenient one-stop-shop for all your daily needs. Some other synonyms for supermarkets include hypermarkets, marketplaces, food shops, and convenience stores. Hypermarkets typically have a larger selection of products that go beyond just groceries, such as electronics and clothing. Marketplaces are open-air markets that often focus on selling fresh produce, meat, and seafood. Food shops are specialty stores that sell a particular type of food, such as a butcher shop or bakery. Convenience stores offer a smaller selection of products and are typically open 24-hours for quick and easy shopping.

What are the paraphrases for Supermarkets?

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What are the hypernyms for Supermarkets?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Usage examples for Supermarkets

The civilization of the city, which produced the high-rise buildings, the Shinkansen, the jet planes, the computers, and the supermarkets likewise produced nuclear weapons.
"Down-with-the-Cities"
Nakashima, Tadashi
Other services have large online supermarkets with many stores, and you can by while you visit.
"The Online World"
Odd de Presno
Grocery supermarkets put in casket departments.
"And All the Earth a Grave"
Carroll M. Capps (AKA C.C. MacApp)

Famous quotes with Supermarkets

  • We ask from the heart that supermarkets, which are now more profitable and selling more, help us to take care of the pocketbook of the people by not raising prices.
    Nestor Kirchner
  • Even if we give parents all the information they need and we improve school meals and build brand new supermarkets on every corner, none of that matters if when families step into a restaurant, they can't make a healthy choice.
    Michelle Obama
  • To me, the irony of this involvement with size, as I observed earlier, is the unwillingness or inability of so many Americans to identify themselves with something as vast as the United States. Bigger cars, bigger parking lots, bigger corporate structures, bigger farms, bigger drug stores, bigger supermarkets, bigger motion-picture screens. The tangible and the functional expand, while the intangible and the beautiful shrink. Left to wither is the national purpose, national educational needs, literature and theater, and our critical faculties. The national dialogue is gradually being lost in a froth of misleading self-congratulation and cliche. National needs and interests are slowly being submerged by the national preoccupation with the irrelevant.
    J. William Fulbright
  • Or you'll get on your cell phone, which is really smart. "Oh I'm gonna be late!" That's fuckin smart: to drive with one of those fuckin things in your hand. It's bad enough that people are in supermarkets -- "Honey, I love you." FUCK YOU, okay? Shut-up! I'm trying to buy a tomato, okay, got it? I'm even carrying mine, this piece of shit. This is Sprint. [] Oh.. FUCK SPRINT. okay? You work for those idiots, I need to talk to you. "Every call is crystal clear." Yeah, right: to yourself! You can hear you!
    Lewis Black
  • Industrial progress, mechanical improvement, all of the great wonders of the modern era have meant little to the wealthy. The rich in ancient Greece would have benefited hardly at all from modern plumbing — running servants replaced running water. Television and radio — the patricians of Rome could enjoy the leading musicians and actors in their home, could have the leading artists as domestic retainers. Ready-to-wear clothing, supermarkets — all these and many other modern developments would have added little to their life. They would have welcomed the improvements in transportation and in medicine, but for the rest, the great achievements of western capitalism have rebounded primarily to the benefit of the ordinary person. These achievements have made available to the masses conveniences and amenities that were previously the exclusive prerogative of the rich and powerful.
    Milton Friedman

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