caféteria

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From French caféteria. Most likely influenced by café, as the more common form in French, cafétéria, is less common in English than this one.

Noun[edit]

caféteria (plural caféterias)

  1. Alternative spelling of cafeteria
    • 1915, United States Naval Medical Bulletin, volume 9, number 3, page 427:
      The general arrangement of our mess hall, scullery, and kitchen made it easy to provide for a caféteria service.
    • 1916, The Craftsman, volume 25, page 573:
      The caféteria and kitchen are in the basement, which, since the land falls away in the rear, is entirely open to light and air.
    • 1917, Women’s Educational and Industrial Union, Annual Report, page 36:
      A lunch room recently equipped by the Students’ Association at the Harvard Medical School has been turned over to the Union to be operated on the caféteria plan.
    • 1917, The Heating and Ventilating Magazine, volume 14, page 27, column 2:
      The lunch room will feed 1,800 students, boys and girls separately, in 30 minutes, on the caféteria plan.
    • 1920, Textile World Journal, volume 56, page 30, column 4:
      Bonuses, rest rooms, showers, caféterias, etc. are hardly known to exist, and a large percentage of the public feels that a mill is a place where an employe works long hours of back-breaking work for small wages and under very poor working conditions.
    • 1935, Illuminating Engineering Society, Light and Lighting and Environmental Design, volume 28, page 246:
      A distinctive type of lighting fitting has been put on the market by Messrs. Harcourts, Ltd., which is particularly suitable for restaurants, cafés, quick-lunch bars, caféterias, etc.
    • 1939, International Co-operative Alliance, Review of International Co-operation, volume 32, page 293:
      These Societies—784 with 102,701 members, Turnover amounting to Gold £5,197,210, Share Capital to Gold £672,949, and Reserves to Gold £880,456—include Building and Housing Societies, Workers’ Clubs, Emporiums, Health Societies, Mutual Aid Societies, Pharmacies, Co-operative Libraries and Publishing Societies, Artisans’ Societies, Transportation Society (Bus Company), Caféterias, etc., and thus represent a great variety of activities.
    • 1999, H. Berberoğlu, Introduction to Modern Canadian Tourism: Including Catering to the Mature Market and Recycling, Food & Beverage Consultants, →ISBN, page 137:
      The industry is composed of a variety of establishments ranging from caféterias, to caterers, camp feeding operations, fine dining rooms, fast-food operations, and hotel food service outlets, to name just a few.
    • 2013, Barry Naughton, editor, Wu Jinglian: Voice of Reform in China, MIT Press, →ISBN:
      After the 1957 Anti-Rightist campaign, there was no way she could be an enterprise manager, and she was eventually assigned to work in the caféteria of the People’s Political Consultative Congress activity center. She immediately began to dedicate the same kind of managerial energy to running the caféteria. Not only did she help to set up a managerial system for the caféteria, she designed and ordered kitchen utensils, and personally made the Sichuan-style pickled vegetables. She converted this caféteria into a good place for Congress members to get a little good food during the years of famine that followed the Great Leap Forward.
    • 2018, The Rough Guide to Poland, Rough Guides, →ISBN:
      Most restaurants and caféterias will offer a broadly similar menu of Polish standards, kicking off with a solid repertoire of soups.

French[edit]

Noun[edit]

caféteria f (plural caféterias)

  1. Alternative spelling of cafétéria
    • 1952, Décrets, ordonnances et règlements statutaires: Codification, 1949, page 3390:
      1. Conciergerie ou pension— / (1) Dix chambres ou plus— / a) Avec salles à manger, caféterias, etc.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • 1966, L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui, page 5, column 2:
      On ne voit pas pourquoi il n’y aurait pas des libraires, des disquaires, des caféterias, etc., à l’intérieur des ensembles universitaires.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)
    • 1980, Procès-verbaux et Témoignages du Comité Permanent des Affaires Extérieures et de la Défense Nationale:
      Je me rends compte qu’il y a tellement de collèges immenses, magnifiques, qui ferment leurs portes pendant l’été, et on y dispose de toutes sortes de services sports dortoirs caféterias.
      I see so many beautiful, large, immense colleges that close down during the summer, where there is every facility: sports facilities, dormitory facilities, food facilities.
      (translation from the first column)
    • 1981, La Gazette du Canada, volume 115, page 964:
      21. Hôtels ayant / a) 51 chambres à coucher ou plus / (i) avec salles à manger, caféterias, etc.
      (please add an English translation of this quotation)