Shia
how do you say “he works at the cafe” when you mean he works physically at the cafe but he is not a barista (he doesn’t work for the cafe”) I noticed this often cause misunderstand
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1
he does his work at the cafe or he goes to the cafe would both make it clear that his job is not at the cafe.
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I don't think there is any way to make this clear other than saying, "He works at the cafe as (a) _____". Fill in the blank with whatever he does. Or else you have to add, "but not as a barista." I can't think of any concise way of making this clear in a single thought.
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Famously, JK Rowling wrote the Harry Potter books (or part of them) at various cafes, because at the time she was poor and needed somewhere warm and dry to work. I noticed that that nearly all the websites that tell this story say "in" a cafe rather than "at". And I think that probably helps people understand the meaning BUT what really makes it clear is that they use the verb "to write" and not the verb "to work", because people (waiters, cooks, etc) who work in cafes don't 'write'. It's a bit more difficult with a computer programmer because I don't think we have a clearly understood verb ('he programs' or 'he codes' aren't really that universally understood). You'd have to say what he does, maybe "He uses his laptop in a cafe."
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"He works from a cafe"
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