释义 |
wait·er \ˈwād.ə(r), -ātə-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from waiten to wait + -er 1. a. archaic : one that watches (as at a city gate) : watchman, guard b. Britain : a customs official — compare landwaiter 2. : one that waits or attends upon another: as a. obsolete : a lord-in-waiting or lady-in-waiting b. dialect South : an attendant of the bride or groom at a wedding c. archaic : manservant d. : waiting maid e. : a uniformed official attendant on the London stock exchange f. : a man who waits on table (as in a hotel or restaurant) — compare counterman 3. : a vessel or tray on which something (as a breakfast or tea service) is carried : salver < bringing a waiter laden with all he could desire — B.A.Williams > |