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🥤 Ever wondered why it’s called a “canteen”?

Here’s a tiny word with a BIG travel story.

Imagine you’re a soldier centuries ago.
You don’t have Zomato.
You don’t have a kitchen.
You have one lifeline:

A small bottle hanging at your side — for water (or sometimes wine).
That bottle was your canteen.

The word entered English through French “cantine”, which meant a container—especially the kind used by soldiers for carrying drinks and supplies.

But the story goes even further back…

French got it from Italian “cantina”, meaning a cellar—a place where food and wine were stored. 🍷

So at its heart, “canteen” has always been about one idea:

✅ stored food + stored drink.

Over time, something interesting happened:

If the canteen is where soldiers keep their drinks…
then naturally the word also started meaning the place where food and drink are served.

And that’s how we moved from:

🥤 canteen = bottle
to
🍛 canteen = eating place

So next time you’re standing in the school or office canteen…

Remember: you’re not just buying snacks.

You’re using a word that started as a soldier’s survival bottle.

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