Shop selling only clothes is still shop=clothes even if it is so small that you are unable
to enter inside.
Shop selling only cars is still shop=car even if it is so small that you are unable
to enter inside.

Of course that's very valid scenarios.

In some funny cases kiosk-type shops (sells drinks, newspapers, magazines, snacks, cigarettes and the like) may be big enough that you can enter (for example at train
stations).
In this case I will map as shop=convenience instead.


On 3/6/19 3:33 PM, Mateusz Konieczny wrote:
Yes, shop is not becoming shop=kiosk just becomes you are unable to enter inside.

Shop selling only clothes is still shop=clothes even if it is so small that you are unable
to enter inside.

Shop selling only cars is still shop=car even if it is so small that you are unable
to enter inside.

In some funny cases kiosk-type shops (sells drinks, newspapers, magazines, snacks, cigarettes and the like) may be big enough that you can enter (for example at train
stations).


Mar 6, 2019, 4:23 PM by [email protected]:

    kiosk and convenience is supposed to be the same? I always used it
    like

    - convenience: small supermarket that is usually too small to have
    shopping carts but still also sells things of daily need (shampoo,
    toilet paper, milk, cornflakes, bread and spread,...). The typical
    7-Eleven store (doesn't exist in Germany btw)

    - kiosk: very small store that usually only sells drinks,
    newspapers, magazines, snacks, cigarettes and the like. Sometimes
    even so small that you can't go inside but buy things through the
    window

    Tobias

    Am 6. März 2019 16:06:25 MEZ schrieb Jean-Marc Liotier
    <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>:
    >On Wed, March 6, 2019 3:58 pm, Enock Seth Nyamador wrote:

            Jean-Marc I agree with about shop=boutique much used in
            West Africa.

    >The

            reason being that the shops have boutique attached to
            their names.

    >Indeed. In Dakar and Bamako, when you need to buy a Fanta, tu vas
    à la
    >boutique... So I can't really blame contributors for using the word
    >that
    >sound most natural to them.


    >Depending on how big the shop is, solutions would be shop=kiosk
    (after
    >years of pushing we are beginning to see that one adopted) and
    >shop=convenience (which is not used enough)


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