I live in Canada and we don’t have them but often we see on TV mention of places called bordega, not sure how to spell it but always wondered what it is.
A spanish word that means a storehouse for storing wine, or an apothecary. Now it’s a also used in NYC for a Hispanic grocery store.
Do you mean bodega? I think it generally is used to refer to small, neighborhood shops.
From Oxford Dictionary:
/bodega/ n. a cellar or shop selling wine and food, esp. in a Spanish-speaking country.
Sp. f. L apotheca f. Gk apoth&emac.k&emac. storehouse
Sorry, I forgot. It’s spelled “bodega”, no ‘r’.
Cool. My first simul-post, Ankh_Too!
BTW, the Hitchcock classic “The Birds” was filmed near and around the community of Bodega Bay, about an hour or so north of San Francisco.
bodega
Bodega (CA)
bo·de·ga
n.
A small Hispanic grocery store, sometimes combined with a wineshop.
A warehouse for the storage of wine.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Third Edition Copyright © 1992, 1996 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
In my little neck of the woods the word bodega would occasionally be used to describe a bar that served food.
You wouldn’t have run across this word tonight on “America’s Most Wanted” did you?
“…by the bodegas and the lights on upper Broadway…”
Diamonds on the Soles of her Shoes- Paul Simon
Oh, I get it! It’s a US depanneur! 
When I took a cruise to Ensenanda three years ago I noticed that the wharves were marked “Bodega <number>”. I thought
the word meant “wharf” or “dock”, but then again maybe it
referred to warehouses. Trouble is, I don’t think there really are any warehouses there. I just remember seeing
a series of flat wharves, like piers. I don’t think the Port of Ensenada is really used for anything besides cruise ships.