From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcaffcaff /kæf/ noun [countable] British English informal DFDLa café
Examples from the Corpus
caff• I was right - there's a caff there, so I go in.• He's wearing a paper hat - you know, like they do in caffs.• Usually flowers in caffs are plastic, but these ain't - they're really real.• There's caffs and that usually in railway stations.• It's pretty quiet in the caff.• I du n no how tall it is, but the Christmas tree outside the caff is blummin huge.• I du n no what to do, so I go back to the caff and have a look in the window.• The caff now seems to have more customers than the railway, and would do better still if they cleared the tables.Origin caff (1900-2000) café