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  1. Dictionary
    emporium
    /ɪmˈpɔːrɪəm/

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. EMPORIUM definition: 1. a large shop that sells many different types of goods, or a shop that sells a particular type of…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of EMPORIUM is a place of trade; especially : a commercial center. How to use emporium in a sentence.

  4. a large store selling a large range of goods, or a store selling a particular type of goods: This chain of discount emporia sells everything from wardrobes to paper clips. Welcome to the Chocolate Emporium - an online store selling every kind of chocolate imaginable.

  5. a large retail store, especially one selling a great variety of articles. Synonyms: bazaar, marketplace, market. 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.

  6. An emporium is a large store or shop selling a wide variety of merchandise. When first introduced, the emporium was actually a department store with a wide variety of things for sale. Their award-winning store is described as an emporium of delights, a new concept in retail with its own concierge and themed fitting rooms.

  7. Definition of emporium noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. An emporium is a large store that sells a variety of merchandise. You can call a department store, with its many different departments, an emporium. Any retail store that separates its goods into different areas — like "men's hats" and "kids' shoes" and "household goods" — can be called an emporium.

  9. n. pl. em·po·ri·ums or em·po·ri·a (-pôr′ē-ə) 1. A place where various goods are bought and sold; a marketplace. 2. A large retail store or place of business: a furniture emporium. [Latin, from Greek emporion, from emporos, traveler, merchant : en-, in; see en-2 + poros, journey; see per- in Indo-European roots .]

  10. Jun 2, 2024 · Borrowed from Latin emporium (“trading station, market town, market”); from Ancient Greek ἐμπόριον (empórion, “trading station”), from ἔμπορος (émporos, “merchant", "traveller", literally "incomer"”), from ἐν (en, “in”) and πόρος (póros, “journey”) .

  11. emporium. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Related topics: Trade em‧po‧ri‧um /ɪmˈpɔːriəm/ noun (plural emporiums or emporia /-riə/) [ countable] old-fashioned a large shop Examples from the Corpus emporium • The Palace was an emporium dedicated to the palates of the cosmos.