Originated in Italy, the history of the word cappuccino shows that a word often comes out of other meaning because of what it looks like. The monks of capuchin monkey monastery, founded after 1525, all wore brown robes and pointed hats. When the Church of Saint Ji Fang was introduced to Italy, the local people named it cappuccino because they thought it was special. In Italian, it refers to the loose robes and pointed hats worn by monks.
However, Lao Yi likes coffee. He found that after mixing espresso, milk and milk foam, the color was like the dark brown cassock worn by monks. So he had a brainwave and added coffee to the milk with sharp milk bubbles, named it cappuccino. 1948, when a report in San Francisco first introduced cappuccino, the word was first used in English, and it didn't become a well-known coffee drink until 1990. Beneficial adoption