anglais > français | |
cater | |
1. v. Répondre aux besoins de. | |
She's always catering to his slightest whim. | |
2. v. (Cuisine) Ravitailler, s'occuper de la nourriture. | |
Did you hire someone to cater our party next week? | |
As-tu engagé quelqu'un pour le ravitaillement de notre fête la semaine prochaine ? | |
3. n. (Archaïque) (Variante de;caterer). | |
anglais > anglais | |
cater | |
1. v. To provide, particularly: | |
2. v. To provide with food, especially for a special occasion as a professional service. | |
I catered for her bat mitzvah. | |
His company catered our wedding. | |
3. v. (intransitive, figurative, with 'to') To provide anything required or desired, often (pejorative) to pander. | |
I always wanted someone to cater to my every whim. | |
4. n. (obsolete) (altname, acater): an officer who purchased cates (food supplies) for the steward of a large household or estate. | |
5. n. (obsolete) (altname, caterer): any provider of food. | |
6. n. (figurative, obsolete) (altname, purveyor): any provider of anything. | |
7. v. (UK dialect) To place, set, move, or cut diagonally or rhomboidally. | |
8. adv. (UK dialect, US) Diagonally. | |
9. n. (rare, obsolete) Four. | |
10. n. (cards, dice, obsolete) The four of cards or dice. | |
11. n. (music) A method of ringing nine bells in four pairs with a ninth tenor bell. | |