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supermarket
[soo-per-mahr-kit]
noun
- a large retail market that sells food and other household goods and that is usually operated on a self-service basis. 
- any business or company offering an unusually wide range of goods or services. - a financial supermarket that sells stocks, bonds, insurance, and real estate. 
supermarket
/ ˈsuːpəˌmɑːkɪt /
noun
- a large self-service store retailing food and household supplies 
Word History and Origins
Origin of supermarket1
Example Sentences
If you eat out more than you buy groceries, for example, you’ll want cards that give you points at restaurants rather than supermarkets.
It led to him working in a Bilbao supermarket, first as a shelf stacker and then in charge of the fruit counter.
The 77-year-old missed a bend on his bike on his way home from the supermarket on a lonely road in the mountainous Cevennes region, careening down a rocky slope and into the ravine near Saint-Julien-des-Points.
But he also talks about his taste for drinking raw, unpasteurised milk, which cannot be bought in shops or supermarkets - though its sale is legal in England.
More than £100m was spent on sugar confectionery at British supermarkets in the four weeks to 5 October - up 5% on the same period a year ago, according to data from Worldpanel by Numerator.
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