English edit

Noun edit

corner pub (plural corner pubs)

  1. A pub on the corner of two roads; a pub that is very near - one's local (just around the corner)
    • 2000, Pathfinders Travel: The Travel Magazine for People of Color, page 52:
      Although the fish and chips you order in the typical corner pub is about as exciting as Arthur Treacher's in the food court, the common myth that there's no exciting food in London has no basis in fact.
    • 2007, Fred “Max” Roberts, The Delivery Man, →ISBN, page 119:
      I attempted to capture the friendly, relaxing atmosphere of upscale metro-Atlanta bars, at least the ones that had the feeling of a corner pub.
    • 2017 February 20, Paul Mason, “Climate scepticism is a far-right badge of honour – even in sweltering Australia”, in the Guardian[1]:
      It makes the streets deserted and the ice-cold salons of corner pubs get crowded with people who don’t like beer. It is the Aussie heatwave: and it is no joke.
    • 2019, Richard Parke-Taylor, Memories Best Forgotten, →ISBN:
      This particular tavern looked larger than the typical corner pub seen all over the British Isles.