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单词 bistro
释义

Definition of bistro in English:

bistro

nounPlural bistros ˈbiːstrəʊˈbɪstrəʊ
  • A small, inexpensive restaurant.

    小餐馆,廉价小饭店

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The ground floor, first floor and part of the second floor would contain bars, restaurants, bistros, lounges and a dancing area.
    • After walking several blocks and passing well over a dozen pavement cafes and bistros, we found a place with the dry sausage he desired on their menu.
    • Over the past two decades, windsurfing has made Hood River the fabled adventure hot spot that it is, and the jocks have brought a taste for bistros and brasseries.
    • Collector's Cafe, a Myrtle Beach gallery and restaurant modeled after the art bistros of 17 th-century Europe, is an oasis of sophistication in a vast playground of lowbrow beach fun.
    • Adjacent to the main pool area will be one of the largest seafood restaurants and bistros on Chaweng Beach, with the opening of a 250 seat, 1,200 sq m Talay Boat Restaurant.
    • But yesterday Scarborough councillors voted to allow drinking outside restaurants and bistros in the Huntriss Row area off the town centre for a six-month trial.
    • You can stay in a hotel or inn in Old Quebec, enjoy a myriad of restaurants, bistros, sidewalk cafes, and yet you are only 40 minutes away from the great outdoors.
    • Together they roam Paris, from cafe to cafe, neighborhood to neighborhood, restaurants, bars, bistros, the nightlife and underbelly of Montmartre.
    • Why deny the business to all those chic, downtown restaurants and bistros?
    • For evening meals, there were literally hundreds of bistros and restaurants on our doorstep, although it was a struggle to find anywhere that catered for vegetarians.
    • The association contacted 500 restaurants, bistros and food-serving pubs in nine UK cities, posing as customers with a guide dog hoping to make a booking.
    • Almost everywhere in the country, from candlelit bistros to high-end restaurants, dining is a celebration of traditional fare dressed in innovative flavors.
    • The bars, restaurants, bistros and nightclubs are teeming with them, all spending easily.
    • Every season throws up a new clutch of restaurants, but my advice is to eat where the locals do at the handful of cafes / bistros that never go out of style.
    • Results were consistent whether the venue was an upscale bistro or a university cafeteria.
    • Edinburgh boasts more restaurants per capita than anywhere else in Scotland, as well as plenty of pubs, cafes, and bistros.
    • It's got a lot of new bistros and ethnic restaurants - which used to be lacking - and the town itself is looking better than it ever did.
    • On average, so the guide says, a new restaurant, cafe or bistro is opening in one of the cities each week.
    • Many of them opened bistros or little restaurants with big ideas and some dog-eared paperbacks.
    • Just ahead, we'll find out about efforts to get the cafes and the bistros back in business.

Origin

1920s: French; perhaps related to bistouille, a northern colloquial term meaning 'bad alcohol', perhaps from Russian bystro 'rapidly'.

Definition of bistro in US English:

bistro

noun
  • A small restaurant.

    小餐馆,廉价小饭店

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Together they roam Paris, from cafe to cafe, neighborhood to neighborhood, restaurants, bars, bistros, the nightlife and underbelly of Montmartre.
    • You can stay in a hotel or inn in Old Quebec, enjoy a myriad of restaurants, bistros, sidewalk cafes, and yet you are only 40 minutes away from the great outdoors.
    • Every season throws up a new clutch of restaurants, but my advice is to eat where the locals do at the handful of cafes / bistros that never go out of style.
    • Almost everywhere in the country, from candlelit bistros to high-end restaurants, dining is a celebration of traditional fare dressed in innovative flavors.
    • Results were consistent whether the venue was an upscale bistro or a university cafeteria.
    • But yesterday Scarborough councillors voted to allow drinking outside restaurants and bistros in the Huntriss Row area off the town centre for a six-month trial.
    • The association contacted 500 restaurants, bistros and food-serving pubs in nine UK cities, posing as customers with a guide dog hoping to make a booking.
    • The ground floor, first floor and part of the second floor would contain bars, restaurants, bistros, lounges and a dancing area.
    • On average, so the guide says, a new restaurant, cafe or bistro is opening in one of the cities each week.
    • Edinburgh boasts more restaurants per capita than anywhere else in Scotland, as well as plenty of pubs, cafes, and bistros.
    • Many of them opened bistros or little restaurants with big ideas and some dog-eared paperbacks.
    • Just ahead, we'll find out about efforts to get the cafes and the bistros back in business.
    • Adjacent to the main pool area will be one of the largest seafood restaurants and bistros on Chaweng Beach, with the opening of a 250 seat, 1,200 sq m Talay Boat Restaurant.
    • It's got a lot of new bistros and ethnic restaurants - which used to be lacking - and the town itself is looking better than it ever did.
    • For evening meals, there were literally hundreds of bistros and restaurants on our doorstep, although it was a struggle to find anywhere that catered for vegetarians.
    • Collector's Cafe, a Myrtle Beach gallery and restaurant modeled after the art bistros of 17 th-century Europe, is an oasis of sophistication in a vast playground of lowbrow beach fun.
    • Why deny the business to all those chic, downtown restaurants and bistros?
    • Over the past two decades, windsurfing has made Hood River the fabled adventure hot spot that it is, and the jocks have brought a taste for bistros and brasseries.
    • The bars, restaurants, bistros and nightclubs are teeming with them, all spending easily.
    • After walking several blocks and passing well over a dozen pavement cafes and bistros, we found a place with the dry sausage he desired on their menu.

Origin

1920s: French; perhaps related to bistouille, a northern colloquial term meaning ‘bad alcohol’, perhaps from Russian bystro ‘rapidly’.

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更新时间:2025/1/14 12:07:06