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单词 bill of fare
释义

Definition of bill of fare in English:

bill of fare

noun
dated
  • 1A menu.

    〈旧〉菜单,菜谱

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The whole bill of fare is deceptively simple, but each dish is prepared with that little extra something that lifts it from the ordinary to the delicious.
    • One diner complained that she and her companions were ‘hunched over our menus like horses at a trough,’ squinting through the dimness to read the bill of fare.
    • The bartending staff impacts every aspect of your operation, from portioning and marketing your bill of fare to rendering prompt and gracious hospitality to your clientele.
    • The bill of fare is advertised as ‘ethnic vegetarian cooking ‘but I spy some flesh creeping into this season's entrees.’
    • ‘Weeeell, OK then,’ he says, rubbing his hands together in satirical, Starvin'-Marvin glee, before refocusing on the outrageous bill of fare.
    • The blackboard above lists the simple yet delicious bill of fare that just won the Standard mention as one of the city's 50 best restaurants in Philadelphia magazine.
    • A similar story, perhaps apochryphal, is told about a prominent QC who breezed into the bar demanding the bill of fare and was promptly led out into the street, whereupon he was asked by Ross to read the pub sign.
    • The dramatic bills of fare change five to six times a year, featuring different drinks per season in the center spread.
    • The bill of fare is homely, cheap, and effortlessly stylish.
    • Laguna's Sorrento Grill is a popular haunt, one known for its bar as well as contemporary bill of fare.
    • Although the bill of fare is chalked up behind the servery, menus are available to enable leisurely contemplation before selection.
    • ‘You look very nice tonight, Caroline,’ Mr. Thomas said, smiling at her across the table, completely ignoring his own bill of fare.
    • Around the room, heads bobbed ever so slightly to pleasant Cuban rhythms while we turned our attention to the bill of fare.
    • Christmas Partying in the town: Most hotels and restaurants in the town have put on show their Christmas bill of fare and by all accounts places are being whipped up, so if you haven't already booked get ‘cracking’.
    • Considered representative of a chef's menu as well as a window into his or her culinary soul, small food regains its rightful place of prominence on the bill of fare.
    • This is usually the point where a ‘gastropub’ menu spoils the effect by touting some variant on bangers and mash starting at a brazen 12 quid, but on this evening's one-sheet bill of fare, the prices are a pleasant surprise.
    • No one said you have to offer the same bill of fare at your bar as does the competition.
    1. 1.1 A programme for a theatrical event.
      (戏剧表演)节目单
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The theater. .. played the role that movies played in the first half of the twentieth: it was a kaleidoscopic, democratic institution presenting a widely varying bill of fare to all classes and socioeconomic groups. ..
      • With a bill of fare that includes comedies and dramas from some of the world's best known playwrights, there's bound to be something for everyone to savor in this fast paced evening of contemporary theatrical delights.
      • On a bill of fare featuring Aaron Copeland and Charles Ives will be the premiere of a new work by faculty member Paul Goldstaub.
      • Let him stay home even when Romeo and Juliet is the bill of fare, pocket the costs of tickets, parking, gas, etc., unplug the phone, pick up a volume of Shakespeare, and simply read the play out loud.
      • In his online history of vaudeville, John Kenrick describes the typical bill of fare at major houses.

Definition of bill of fare in US English:

bill of fare

nounbɪl əv
dated
  • 1A menu.

    〈旧〉菜单,菜谱

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Christmas Partying in the town: Most hotels and restaurants in the town have put on show their Christmas bill of fare and by all accounts places are being whipped up, so if you haven't already booked get ‘cracking’.
    • The blackboard above lists the simple yet delicious bill of fare that just won the Standard mention as one of the city's 50 best restaurants in Philadelphia magazine.
    • A similar story, perhaps apochryphal, is told about a prominent QC who breezed into the bar demanding the bill of fare and was promptly led out into the street, whereupon he was asked by Ross to read the pub sign.
    • ‘You look very nice tonight, Caroline,’ Mr. Thomas said, smiling at her across the table, completely ignoring his own bill of fare.
    • ‘Weeeell, OK then,’ he says, rubbing his hands together in satirical, Starvin'-Marvin glee, before refocusing on the outrageous bill of fare.
    • The bill of fare is advertised as ‘ethnic vegetarian cooking ‘but I spy some flesh creeping into this season's entrees.’
    • The dramatic bills of fare change five to six times a year, featuring different drinks per season in the center spread.
    • No one said you have to offer the same bill of fare at your bar as does the competition.
    • One diner complained that she and her companions were ‘hunched over our menus like horses at a trough,’ squinting through the dimness to read the bill of fare.
    • This is usually the point where a ‘gastropub’ menu spoils the effect by touting some variant on bangers and mash starting at a brazen 12 quid, but on this evening's one-sheet bill of fare, the prices are a pleasant surprise.
    • Around the room, heads bobbed ever so slightly to pleasant Cuban rhythms while we turned our attention to the bill of fare.
    • Considered representative of a chef's menu as well as a window into his or her culinary soul, small food regains its rightful place of prominence on the bill of fare.
    • The bill of fare is homely, cheap, and effortlessly stylish.
    • The whole bill of fare is deceptively simple, but each dish is prepared with that little extra something that lifts it from the ordinary to the delicious.
    • Laguna's Sorrento Grill is a popular haunt, one known for its bar as well as contemporary bill of fare.
    • Although the bill of fare is chalked up behind the servery, menus are available to enable leisurely contemplation before selection.
    • The bartending staff impacts every aspect of your operation, from portioning and marketing your bill of fare to rendering prompt and gracious hospitality to your clientele.
    1. 1.1informal The selection of food available to or consumed by (a person or animal)
      our bill of fare in Alaska included clams, mussels, and herring
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Our bill of fare included a hearty soup, roasted chicken, spare rib, potato, pastry and a beverage, all to be eaten by hand.
      • Indeed, on the first occasion when I assisted, as General Botha's guest, at a party where this gruesome dish was the main and only item on the bill of fare, two of my fellow gourmets were so overcome that they had to leave the table.
      • The bill of fare: Japanese seafood soup, marinated grilled chicken with roasted corn and bean salsa, pesto cream ravioli, Jasmine rice, snow peas, creamed corn and salad.
      • Snickers, Doritos, Little Debbie Snack Cakes: this was the expected bill of fare - or maybe warmed-up corn dogs if the owner fancied himself a master of haute cuisine.
      • The bill of fare on offer was high class with the Final of The J.P. Moran sponsored Newbridge Oaks the icing on the cake.
      • Sir Thomas Browne had remarked in the 17th century that cranes were often seen in Norfolk in hard winters and must have been more plentiful in earlier times, when they figured in bills of fare for banquets.
      • The bill of fare (tortilla chips, burgers, steak sandwiches and chocolate sundaes) would have excited every couch potato in the country, even before they discovered that each dish was home-made by Allen's fair hand.
      • There are nine items on the Christmas lunch bill of fare.
      • And the season's greetings will, as they have before, assume we will have long forgotten they were on the bill of fare at the last feast.
      • That is the Easter Sunday bill of fare in Dr. Cullen Park and it wouldn't take a rocket scientist to fathom that followers of the purple and gold will be the better able to relish their festive eggs.
      • Bjarne has to make a big decision in order to raise his share of the stake - that's ‘stake,’ not ‘steak’ - when a tragic accident leads to a departure from the usual bill of fare…
      • The market is almost predominantly from the locale, but people have travelled from as far away as Carrick On Shannon, Sligo and Longford to sample the delights of a highly extensive bill of fare.
    2. 1.2 A program for a theatrical event.
      (戏剧表演)节目单
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In his online history of vaudeville, John Kenrick describes the typical bill of fare at major houses.
      • With a bill of fare that includes comedies and dramas from some of the world's best known playwrights, there's bound to be something for everyone to savor in this fast paced evening of contemporary theatrical delights.
      • The theater. .. played the role that movies played in the first half of the twentieth: it was a kaleidoscopic, democratic institution presenting a widely varying bill of fare to all classes and socioeconomic groups. ..
      • On a bill of fare featuring Aaron Copeland and Charles Ives will be the premiere of a new work by faculty member Paul Goldstaub.
      • Let him stay home even when Romeo and Juliet is the bill of fare, pocket the costs of tickets, parking, gas, etc., unplug the phone, pick up a volume of Shakespeare, and simply read the play out loud.
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更新时间:2024/9/21 11:20:16