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diner

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: Diner, dîner, dīner, and dinêṟ

English

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a diner (etymology 1, noun sense 4) from the outside
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Inside this diner (etymology 1, noun sense 4) in the USA, some diners (etymology 1, noun sense 1) are seated.
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inside a diner (etymology 1, noun sense 4) in the USA
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a diner (etymology 1, noun sense 3) in the United States

Etymology 1

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    From dine + -er.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    diner (plural diners)

    1. Someone who dines.
      • 1921, Ben Travers, chapter 5, in A Cuckoo in the Nest, Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, Page & Company, published 1925, →OCLC:
        The most rapid and most seductive transition in all human nature is that which attends the palliation of a ravenous appetite. [] Can those harmless but refined fellow-diners be the selfish cads whose gluttony and personal appearance so raised your contemptuous wrath on your arrival?
      • 1983, Calvin Trillin, Third Helpings:
        When it comes to Chinese food I have always operated under the policy that the less known about the preparation the better. A wise diner who is invited to visit the kitchen replies by saying, as politely as possible, that he has a pressing engagement elsewhere.
    2. (rare) Someone who gives a dinner.
      Hypernym: host
      Coordinate terms: dinee, guest
      • 1821, “On Collecting”, in The New Monthly Magazine and Literary Journal, volume I, Original Papers, number III, London: Henry Colburn and Co. [], →OCLC, page 361:
        In the noble science of gastronomy, likewise, he who can not afford to collect a cellar of wines, and accumulate the rarities of distant climes and seasons, will make but little progress, For, though the diner and the dinee, the host and the guest, have similar sources open to them, yet the most practised parasite can not attain to the same regular course of study, as the Amphitryon Millionaire.
      • 2004, Will Jones, “Tina from New Mexico: Let Me Tell You ’bout This A**hole…”, in Let Me Tell You ’bout This…, Victoria, B.C.: Trafford Publishing, →ISBN, page 145:
        f I was broke, we’d just hang out at his place or my place looking at videos. This was very new and very different for me. Like I said, I’d been used to being wined and dined, you know, being the “dinee”. Is that a word? Anyway, now, I’m the “diner”. Does that make any sense? You know what I’m trying to say, right?
      • 2020, Elle Katharine White, “Matriculation”, in Jonathan Strahan, editor, The Book of Dragons: An Anthology, New York, N.Y.: Harper Voyager, →ISBN:
        The street outside was nearly empty, though it wouldn’t stay that way for long. The dinner crowds would be out soon, hawking their blood and other valuable living assets to the vitally challenged for tokens and textbooks and practical tips on how to pass Professor Boynya’s first alchemy exam. Both diners and dinees were waiting for the sun to slip behind the spindling brick façades of Pawn Row, but for now, Melee had the street to herself.
    3. A car in a railroad train that serves meals.
      Synonyms: dining car, restaurant car
      Hypernyms: railroad car, rail car, car, carriage < rolling stock < vehicle
      Coordinate terms: buffet car, refreshment car, club car, pie car; private car; dining room, dining hall, dining facility
      • 1951 January, R. A. H. Weight, “A Railway Recorder in Essex and Hertfordshire”, in Railway Magazine, page 46:
        Pacific No. 60123, H. A. Ivatt, a Leeds engine with 12 corridors, but no diners, went by, however.
      • 1979, Richard Gutman, American Diner:
        The diner is everybody's kitchen.
    4. (US) A typically small restaurant, historically modeled after a railroad dining car, that serves lower-class fare, normally having a counter with stools along one side and booths on the other.
      Synonyms: (British) pub, choke and puke; see also Thesaurus:restaurant
    Derived terms
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    Translations
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    Further reading

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    Etymology 2

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    English Wikipedia has an article on:
    Wikipedia

    From Catalan diner. Doublet of denar, denarius, denier, dinar, dinero, and dinheiro.

    Noun

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    diner (plural diners)

    1. A commemorative currency of Andorra, not legal tender, divided into 100 centims.

    Anagrams

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    Breton

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    Etymology

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    From Latin denarius.

    Noun

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    diner ?

    1. denary

    Catalan

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    Etymology

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    Inherited from Vulgar Latin *dīnārius, an alteration of Latin dēnārius. Doublet of dinar and denari.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    diner m (plural diners)

    1. (usually in the plural) money
    2. (historical) denier
    3. (historical) denarius
      Synonym: denari

    Derived terms

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    Further reading

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    Cornish

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    Etymology

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    From Old Cornish dinair, from Proto-Brythonic *dinėr, borrowed from Latin dēnārius.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    diner m (plural dinerow)

    1. penny

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    See also

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    • peuns (pound (currency))

    Mutation

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    Mutation of diner
    radical soft aspirate hard mixed
    diner dhiner unchanged tiner tiner

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Cornish.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

    Dutch

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    Etymology

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    Borrowed from French dîner, from Middle French [Term?], from Old French disner.

    Pronunciation

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    Noun

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    diner n (plural diners, diminutive dinertje n)

    1. dinner, supper

    Synonyms

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    French

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    Pronunciation

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    Verb

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    diner

    1. post-1990 spelling of dîner

    Conjugation

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    Further reading

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    Middle English

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    Noun

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    diner

    1. alternative form of dyner

    Portuguese

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    Noun

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    diner m (plural diners)

    1. diner (a small and inexpensive type of restaurant)

    Walloon

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    Pronunciation

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    Verb

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    diner

    1. alternative form of dner