cafeterie
English
Noun
cafeterie (plural cafeteries)
- (dated) Cafeteria.
- 1907, Laura A. Taylor, Three Westerners Abroad, page 46:
- There is no "diner," so we get off the train for breakfast, and have some more cafeterie experience. A plate, knife and fork are provided, the rest you are expected to do for yourself, pay your bill and depart.
- 1909, Harvester World, International Harvester Company of America, Vol. 1, p. 28,
- A central kitchen serves a cafeterie, seating two hundred; a café, seating seventy; and a lunch counter with stools for forty.
- 1911, The Philistine, a Periodical of Protest, volume 33, page 10:
- In front of a cafeterie in San Francisco I saw a donkey carrying sandwich-boards upon which was lettered the legend, “This Cafeterie employs non-union labor. Do not patronize it!”
- (dated) Pantry, stillroom.
- 1933 January 9, George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], chapter IX, in Down and Out in Paris and London, London: Victor Gollancz […], →OCLC:
- It appeared that the cafeterie was the very lowest post in the hotel, and a dreadful come-down for a waiter […]
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