User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
cantina f (plural cantine)Related terms
Extensive Definition
Cantina is a word that can refer to various
places and establishments. It is similar in etymology to "canteen", and is derived from
the Italian
word for a wine cellar,
winery, or vault.
It is probably derived ultimately from the Late Latin
canto, meaning "corner".
Cantinas are found in many towns of Italy. The cantina,
being fresh and humid, is also used to store meat products such as
salame.
The term cantina entered the French
language circa 1710 as cantine. It
was used originally to refer to the shop of a sutler. From 1744, cantine acquired
the meaning also of a "small tin for water or liquor, carried by
soldiers on the march." The English language also uses the term
"canteen" to refer to this type of flask.
Cantinas in the Spanish-Speaking World
It entered the Spanish language unchanged in spelling as cantina during the second half of the 16th century. Cantina was one of the foreign words that entered in from Renaissance Italy. During the 16th century, the Spanish Empire included large holdings in Italy. Luis de Bávia wrote in his Tercera y Cuarta Parte de la Historia Pontifical y Católica (1621): "Perdiéndose en las cantinas y lugares baxos [sic] gran número de mercaderías..." ("Losing itself in the cantinas and places of ill repute a large quantity of merchandise...").The cantina features in one of the sonnets of Francisco
de Quevedo (1580-1645). This is a quatrain from that
sonnet:
- Esta cantina revestida en faz;
- esta vendimia en hábito soez;
- este pellejo, que, con media nuez,
- queda con una cuba taz a taz.
- esta vendimia en hábito soez;
- This wine-cellar covered with a face;
- this wine-harvest [clad] in filthy habit;
- this wine-skin, which, with just a sip,
- is happy to exchange it for a [whole] vat.
- this wine-harvest [clad] in filthy habit;
In the 1890s, cantina
entered American
English from the Spanish
language in the Southwest
United States with the meaning of "bar,
saloon."
The word cantina in the USA today is generally taken to mean simply
a tavern with a Southwestern or Mexican motif that serves
traditional alcoholic Mexican drinks.
In Spain today, the
cantina refers to a bar located in a train
station or any establishment located at or near a workplace where food and
drinks are served.
In rural Mexico, cantina
traditionally refers to a kind of bar that is normally frequented
only by males for the purpose of imbibing alcohol and partaking of
botanas (appetizers). They can often be distinguished by signs that
expressly prohibit entrance to women (mujeres) and children
(menores de edad), as opposed to a club, salon de bailar (dance
hall), or salon de mariachi (typified by the Salon
Tenampa, at the Plaza
Garibaldi in Mexico City)
which are intended for socializing between the sexes. Some of the
traditional restrictions on entry to cantinas are beginning to fade
away. However, in many areas it is still viewed as scandalous for
proper ladies to be seen visiting a genuine cantina.
Use in Star Wars
The term "cantina" gained stronger exposure in the United States through filmmaker George Lucas. The word was appropriated to refer to the drinking establishments found in his fictional Star Wars universe, of which the most well-known (in the real world, as opposed to in-universe) is the Mos Eisley Cantina. In this cantina, Han Solo and Chewbacca meet Obi Wan Kenobi and Luke Skywalker for the first time (as seen in the 1977 film Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope). In the Star Wars universe, cantinas vary considerably in quality and amenities available. At a minimum, drinks are served, but live bands and dancers such as Twi'lek slaves have been known to perform as well.cantina in Spanish: Cantina
cantina in Dutch: Kantine
cantina in Norwegian: Kantine
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
automat, bar, barroom, beanery, bistro, buffet, buvette, cafe, cafeteria, canteen, chophouse, chuck wagon, coffee
shop, coffeehouse,
coffeeroom, cookhouse, cookshack, cookshop, diner, dining hall, dining room,
dog wagon, drinkery,
drive-in, drive-in restaurant, eatery, eating house, fast-food
chain, gin mill, grill,
grillroom, groggery, hamburger stand, hash
house, hashery, hot-dog
stand, kitchen, lunch
counter, lunch wagon, luncheonette, lunchroom, mess hall, pizzeria, pothouse, pub, quick-lunch counter, restaurant, saloon, smorgasbord, snack bar,
tavern, tearoom, trattoria