Definition of the word rest

Verb



We will not rest until we discover the truth.



The workers were resting in the shade.



He is resting comfortably after his ordeal.



She went to her room to rest for a while.



The coach canceled practice to rest his team.



He rested his horse before continuing the journey.



You should rest your eyes after all that reading.



The pitcher needs to rest his arm.



The spoon was resting in the cup.



The house rests on a concrete foundation.

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Recent Examples on the Web



In this experiment, 12 healthy, young people rode an exercise bike at a very leisurely pace for 90 minutes, followed by six minutes of intervals consisting of 40 seconds of all-out pedaling interspersed with 20 seconds of rest.


Gretchen Reynolds, Anchorage Daily News, 5 Apr. 2023





The elder cooked for more than 35 years in professional kitchens, first in China and later in Turkey, before recently retiring in his mid-50s, his body aching for rest after hovering over stoves for so long.


Tim Carman, Washington Post, 3 Apr. 2023





This is a beach strictly for rest and relaxation.


Noelle Khalila Nicolls, Travel + Leisure, 3 Apr. 2023





Cobb would be on turn to start with an extra day of rest, with Junis also available.


Susan Slusser, San Francisco Chronicle, 3 Apr. 2023





Duxiana collaboration is crafted to produce the ultimate olfactory mise en scène for deep rest.


Lauren Valenti, Vogue, 1 Apr. 2023





He’s adjusted his diet and gets plenty of rest, all to reduce the chances of ongoing inflammation.


Josh Fischman, Scientific American, 29 Mar. 2023





That’s 1 rep. Workout B Do 3 sets of 12 reps, unless otherwise noted, with 90 seconds of rest between sets.


David Otey, Men’s Health, 28 Mar. 2023





One woman in a green hoodie stopped for a rest along a Polish highway.


Jeffrey Gettleman, New York Times, 18 Mar. 2023




That makes Celtics fans, whose hopes for redecorating the rafters rest on boasting the NBA’s best tandem anxious.


Christopher L. Gasper, BostonGlobe.com, 6 Apr. 2023





Top with hefeweizen beer and garnish with 3 skewered frozen raspberries (resting across rim) and a metal straw.


Sam Dangremond, Town & Country, 5 Apr. 2023





Smith’s importance to the offense has raised legitimate concerns about his workload, specifically about how much the Dodgers should rest him.


Dylan Hernández, Los Angeles Times, 5 Apr. 2023





The source added that the director wanted to see how the glassware looked while resting atop the white coasters.


Joey Nolfi, EW.com, 4 Apr. 2023





Posing in front of a bunk bed that rests against a wall wallpapered with construction vehicle print, the couple’s seven children each do their best at posing for the shot.


Angela Andaloro, Peoplemag, 4 Apr. 2023





The state rested its case Monday, six months to the day after the trial began.


Lane Sainty, The Arizona Republic, 4 Apr. 2023





However, the straps aren’t very comfortable due to a lack of padding and metal buckles that rest awkwardly on the chest when adjusted.


Anna Popp, Travel + Leisure, 4 Apr. 2023





Many states have passed laws that would punish railroads for blocking road crossings, but that power, state courts rule every time, rests solely with the federal government.


Dan Schwartz, ProPublica, 3 Apr. 2023



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These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘rest.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.


Also found in: Thesaurus, Medical, Legal, Acronyms, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia.

rest

abstain or be relieved from exertion: Rest here awhile before traveling on.; left without further investigation: Let the matter rest.

Not to be confused with:

wrest – to usurp forcefully; to extract by guile or persistence: wrest a confession from the suspect

Abused, Confused, & Misused Words by Mary Embree Copyright © 2007, 2013 by Mary Embree

click for a larger image

rest1

rest (center) equivalent to the duration of an eighth note

rest 1

 (rĕst)

n.

1.

a. A period of inactivity, relaxation, or sleep: The hikers stopped for a rest.

b. Sleep or the refreshment resulting from inactivity or sleep: Get plenty of rest before the race.

c. The repose of death: eternal rest.

d. Mental or emotional calm: The news put my mind at rest.

2. The state of being motionless; the absence of motion: The car accelerates quickly from a state of rest.

3. The condition of being settled or resolved: a remark that put the matter to rest.

4. Music

a. An interval of silence corresponding to one of the possible time values within a measure.

b. The mark or symbol indicating such a pause and its length.

5. A short pause in a line of poetry; a caesura.

6. A device used as a support: a back rest.

v. rest·ed, rest·ing, rests

v.intr.

1.

a. To cease motion, work, or activity, especially in order to become refreshed: The laborers rested in the shade.

b. To lie down and sleep: rested for an hour on the couch.

2.

a. To be in or come to a motionless state: The can rolled along, finally resting when it hit the curb.

b. To be located or be in a specified place: The manuscript rests in the museum.

c. To be fixed or directed on something: His gaze rested on the necklace.

d. To be unchanged or unresolved: After arguing for an hour, we let the matter rest.

3.

a. To be supported or based; lie, lean, or sit: The ladder rests firmly against the tree.

b. To be imposed or vested, as a responsibility or burden: The final decision rests with the chairperson.

c. To depend or rely: That argument rests on a false assumption.

4. Law To complete the main presentation of one’s portion of a legal case: The defense rests.

v.tr.

1. To cause or allow to be inactive or relaxed so as to regain energy: The coach rested his best players. I rested my eyes before studying.

2. To place, lay, or lean, as for support or repose: rested the rake against the fence.

3. To base or ground: I rested my conclusion on that fact.

4. To fix or direct (the gaze, for example).

5. Law To complete the main presentation of (one’s portion of a case): The prosecutor was not ready to rest her case.

Idioms:

at rest

2. Motionless; inactive.

3. Free from anxiety or distress.

lay/put to rest

1. To bury (a dead body); inter.

2. To resolve or settle (an issue, for example): The judge’s ruling put to rest the dispute between the neighbors.


[Middle English, from Old English.]


rest′er n.


rest 2

 (rĕst)

n.

1. The part that is left over after something has been removed; remainder.

2. That or those remaining: The beginning was boring, but the rest was interesting. The rest are arriving later.

intr.v. rest·ed, rest·ing, rests

1. To be or continue to be; remain: Rest assured that we will finish on time.

2. To remain or be left over.


[Middle English, from Old French reste, from rester, to remain, from Latin restāre, to stay behind : re-, re- + stāre, to stand; see stā- in Indo-European roots.]


rest 3

 (rĕst)

n.

A support for a lance on the side of the breastplate of medieval armor.


[Middle English reste, short for areste, a stopping, holding, from Old French, from arester, to stop; see arrest.]

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

rest

(rɛst)

n

1.

a. relaxation from exertion or labour

b. (as modifier): a rest period.

2. repose; sleep

3. any relief or refreshment, as from worry or something troublesome

4. calm; tranquillity

5. death regarded as repose: eternal rest.

6. cessation from motion

7. at rest

a. not moving; still

b. calm; tranquil

c. dead

d. asleep

8. a pause or interval

9. (Music, other) a mark in a musical score indicating a pause of specific duration

10. (Poetry) prosody a pause in or at the end of a line; caesura

11. a shelter or lodging: a seaman’s rest.

12. a thing or place on which to put something for support or to steady it; prop

13. (Billiards & Snooker) billiards snooker any of various special poles used as supports for the cue in shots that cannot be made using the hand as a support

14. come to rest to slow down and stop

15. lay to rest to bury (a dead person)

16. set someone’s mind at rest to reassure someone or settle someone’s mind

vb

17. to take or give rest, as by sleeping, lying down, etc

18. to place or position (oneself, etc) for rest or relaxation

19. (tr) to place or position for support or steadying: to rest one’s elbows on the table.

20. (intr) to be at ease; be calm

21. to cease or cause to cease from motion or exertion; halt

22. to lie dead and buried

23. (intr) to remain without further attention or action: let the matter rest.

24. to direct (one’s eyes) or (of one’s eyes) to be directed: her eyes rested on the sleeping child.

25. to depend or cause to depend; base; rely: the whole argument rests on one crucial fact.

26. to place or be placed, as blame, censure, etc

27. (Cooking) to put pastry in a cool place to allow the gluten to contract

28. (intr; foll by with, on, upon, etc) to be a responsibility (of): it rests with us to apportion blame.

29. (Law) law to finish the introduction of evidence in (a case)

30. rest on one’s laurels See laurel9

31. rest on one’s oars

a. to stop rowing for a time

b. to stop doing anything for a time

[Old English ræst, reste, of Germanic origin; related to Gothic rasta a mile, Old Norse röst mile]

ˈrester n


rest

(rɛst)

n

1. something left or remaining; remainder

2. the others: the rest of the world.

vb

(copula) to continue to be (as specified); remain: rest assured.

[C15: from Old French rester to remain, from Latin rēstāre, from re- + stāre to stand]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

rest1

(rɛst)

n.

1. the refreshing quiet or repose of sleep.

2. refreshing ease or inactivity after exertion or labor.

3. relief or freedom, esp. from trouble, anxiety, etc.

4. a period or interval of inactivity, repose, solitude, or tranquillity.

5. mental or spiritual calm; tranquillity.

6. the repose of death: eternal rest.

7. cessation or absence of motion.

8. Music.

a. an interval of silence between tones.

b. a mark or sign indicating it.

9. Pros. a short pause within a line; caesura.

10. any stopping or resting place, esp. a shelter or lodging for travelers.

11. a piece or device by which something is supported or upon which it can rest.

v.i.

12. to refresh oneself, as by sleeping, lying down, or relaxing.

13. to be at ease; have tranquillity or peace.

14. to repose in death.

15. to cease from motion or activity; stop.

16. to remain without further action or notice: to let a matter rest.

17. to lie, sit, lean, or be set: His arm rested on the table.

18. (of land) to lie fallow or unworked.

19. to be imposed as a burden or responsibility (usu. fol. by on or upon).

20. to rely (usu. fol. by on or upon).

21. to be based or founded (usu. fol. by on or upon).

22. to be found; belong; reside (often fol. by with): The blame rests with them.

23. to be fixed or directed on something, as the eyes or a gaze.

24. Law. to conclude the introduction of evidence in a case.

v.t.

25. to give rest to; refresh with rest.

26. to lay or place for rest, ease, or support: to rest one’s back against a tree.

27. to direct or cast: to rest one’s eyes on someone.

28. to base, or let depend, as on some ground of reliance.

29. to bring to rest; halt; stop.

30. Law. to conclude the introduction of evidence on: to rest one’s case.

Idioms:

1. at rest,

a. in a state of repose, as in sleep.

b. dead.

c. quiescent; inactive; not in motion.

d. free from worry; tranquil.

2. lay to rest,

a. to inter (a dead body); bury.

b. to allay, suppress, or appease.

[before 900; (n.) Middle English; Old English ræst, rest, c. Old Saxon rasta, resta, Old High German resta rest, peace, Old Norse rǫst rest, mile, Gothic rasta stretch, mile]

rest′er, n.

rest2

(rɛst)

n.

1. the part that is left or remains; remainder.

2. the others: All the rest are going.

v.i.

3. to continue to be; remain as specified: Rest assured that all is well.

[1375–1425; late Middle English: to remain due or unpaid < Middle French rester to remain < Latin restāre to remain standing =re- re- + stāre to stand]

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

rest

In artillery, a command that indicates that the unit(s) or gun(s) to which it is addressed shall not follow up fire orders during the time that the order is in force.

Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. US Department of Defense 2005.

rest

If you are talking about something that cannot be counted, the verb following rest is singular.

The rest of the food was delicious.

If you are talking about several people or things, the verb is plural.

The rest of the boys were delighted.

Collins COBUILD English Usage © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 2004, 2011, 2012

rest

Past participle: rested
Gerund: resting

Imperative
rest
rest
Present
I rest
you rest
he/she/it rests
we rest
you rest
they rest
Preterite
I rested
you rested
he/she/it rested
we rested
you rested
they rested
Present Continuous
I am resting
you are resting
he/she/it is resting
we are resting
you are resting
they are resting
Present Perfect
I have rested
you have rested
he/she/it has rested
we have rested
you have rested
they have rested
Past Continuous
I was resting
you were resting
he/she/it was resting
we were resting
you were resting
they were resting
Past Perfect
I had rested
you had rested
he/she/it had rested
we had rested
you had rested
they had rested
Future
I will rest
you will rest
he/she/it will rest
we will rest
you will rest
they will rest
Future Perfect
I will have rested
you will have rested
he/she/it will have rested
we will have rested
you will have rested
they will have rested
Future Continuous
I will be resting
you will be resting
he/she/it will be resting
we will be resting
you will be resting
they will be resting
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been resting
you have been resting
he/she/it has been resting
we have been resting
you have been resting
they have been resting
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been resting
you will have been resting
he/she/it will have been resting
we will have been resting
you will have been resting
they will have been resting
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been resting
you had been resting
he/she/it had been resting
we had been resting
you had been resting
they had been resting
Conditional
I would rest
you would rest
he/she/it would rest
we would rest
you would rest
they would rest
Past Conditional
I would have rested
you would have rested
he/she/it would have rested
we would have rested
you would have rested
they would have rested

Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun 1. rest — something left after other parts have been taken away; «there was no remainder»; «he threw away the rest»; «he took what he wanted and I got the balance»

remainder, residual, residuum, residue, balance

component part, part, portion, component, constituent — something determined in relation to something that includes it; «he wanted to feel a part of something bigger than himself»; «I read a portion of the manuscript»; «the smaller component is hard to reach»; «the animal constituent of plankton»

leftover, remnant — a small part or portion that remains after the main part no longer exists

2. rest - freedom from activity (work or strain or responsibility)rest — freedom from activity (work or strain or responsibility); «took his repose by the swimming pool»

repose, ease, relaxation

inactivity — being inactive; being less active

bed rest, bedrest — confinement to bed continuously (as in the case of some sick or injured persons)

laziness — relaxed and easy activity; «the laziness of the day helped her to relax»

lie-in — a long stay in bed in the morning

dormancy, quiescence, quiescency, sleeping — quiet and inactive restfulness

leisure — freedom to choose a pastime or enjoyable activity; «he lacked the leisure for golf»

3. rest - a pause for relaxationrest — a pause for relaxation; «people actually accomplish more when they take time for short rests»

rest period, respite, relief

pause, suspension, intermission, interruption, break — a time interval during which there is a temporary cessation of something

breather, breathing place, breathing space, breathing spell, breathing time, breath — a short respite

4. rest — a state of inaction; «a body will continue in a state of rest until acted upon»

inaction, inactiveness, inactivity — the state of being inactive

5. rest — euphemisms for death (based on an analogy between lying in a bed and in a tomb); «she was laid to rest beside her husband»; «they had to put their family pet to sleep»

eternal rest, eternal sleep, quietus, sleep

death — the absence of life or state of being dead; «he seemed more content in death than he had ever been in life»

6. rest — a support on which things can be put; «the gun was steadied on a special rest»

armrest — a support for the arm

chin rest — a rest on which a violinist can place the chin

headrest — a rest for the head

support — any device that bears the weight of another thing; «there was no place to attach supports for a shelf»

7. rest — a musical notation indicating a silence of a specified duration

musical notation — (music) notation used by musicians

whole rest — a musical rest equal in duration to four beats in common time

half rest — a musical rest having the time value of half a whole rest or equal in duration to two beats in common time

quarter rest — a musical rest having one-fourth the time value of a whole rest

Verb 1. rest — not move; be in a resting position

kneel — rest one’s weight on one’s knees; «In church you have to kneel during parts of the service»

stand, stand up — be standing; be upright; «We had to stand for the entire performance!»

be — have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); «John is rich»; «This is not a good answer»

lean against, lean on, rest on — rest on for support; «you can lean on me if you get tired»

build on, build upon, repose on, rest on — be based on; of theories and claims, for example; «What’s this new evidence based on?»

2. rest — take a short break from one’s activities in order to relax

catch one’s breath, take a breather, breathe

intermit, pause, break — cease an action temporarily; «We pause for station identification»; «let’s break for lunch»

3. rest — give a rest to; «He rested his bad leg»; «Rest the dogs for a moment»

blow — allow to regain its breath; «blow a horse»

catch one’s breath, take a breather, rest, breathe — take a short break from one’s activities in order to relax

4. rest — have a place in relation to something else; «The fate of Bosnia lies in the hands of the West»; «The responsibility rests with the Allies»

lie

be — occupy a certain position or area; be somewhere; «Where is my umbrella?» «The toolshed is in the back»; «What is behind this behavior?»

lie — be located or situated somewhere; occupy a certain position

5. rest — be at rest

catch some Z’s, kip, log Z’s, sleep, slumber — be asleep

drowse — be on the verge of sleeping; «The students were drowsing in the 8 AM class»

recumb, recline, repose — lean in a comfortable resting position; «He was reposing on the couch»

be active, move — be in a state of action; «she is always moving»

6. rest — stay the same; remain in a certain state; «The dress remained wet after repeated attempts to dry it»; «rest assured»; «stay alone»; «He remained unmoved by her tears»; «The bad weather continued for another week»

remain, stay

keep out — remain outside

sit tight — maintain the same position; wait it out; «Let’s not make a decision—let’s sit tight»

stay together, stick together — be loyal to one another, especially in times of trouble; «The two families stuck together throughout the war»

be — have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); «John is rich»; «This is not a good answer»

stand — remain inactive or immobile; «standing water»

stay fresh, keep — fail to spoil or rot; «These potatoes keep for a long time»

be — to remain unmolested, undisturbed, or uninterrupted — used only in infinitive form; «let her be»

7. rest — be inherent or innate in;

repose, reside

inhere in, attach to — be part of; «This problem inheres in the design»

8. rest — put something in a resting position, as for support or steadying; «Rest your head on my shoulder»

lay, place, put, set, position, pose — put into a certain place or abstract location; «Put your things here»; «Set the tray down»; «Set the dogs on the scent of the missing children»; «Place emphasis on a certain point»

9. rest — sit, as on a branch; «The birds perched high in the tree»

perch, roost

sit, sit down — be seated

10. rest — rest on or as if on a pillow; «pillow your head»

pillow

lay, place, put, set, position, pose — put into a certain place or abstract location; «Put your things here»; «Set the tray down»; «Set the dogs on the scent of the missing children»; «Place emphasis on a certain point»

11. rest — be inactive, refrain from acting; «The committee is resting over the summer»

hibernate — be in an inactive or dormant state

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

rest

1

verb

1. relax, sleep, take it easy, lie down, idle, nap, be calm, doze, sit down, slumber, kip (Brit. slang), snooze (informal), laze, lie still, be at ease, put your feet up, take a nap, drowse, mellow out (informal), have a snooze (informal), refresh yourself, outspan (S. African), zizz (Brit. informal), have forty winks (informal), take your ease He has been advised to rest for two weeks.
relax work, keep going, slog away (informal)

2. stop, have a break, break off, take a breather (informal), stay, halt, cease, discontinue, knock off (informal), desist, come to a standstill They rested only once that morning.
stop work, keep going, carry on, battle on, struggle on

5. be placed, sit, lie, be supported, be positioned, recline, be propped up by Matt’s elbow rested on the table.

noun

2. relaxation, sleep, time off, repose, ease, leisure, respite, inactivity, idleness I feel in need of some rest.
relaxation work, activity, bustle

3. pause, break, breather, time off, stop, holiday, halt, interval, vacation, respite, lull, interlude, cessation, breathing space (informal), intermission He took a rest from teaching.

4. refreshment, release, relief, ease, comfort, cure, remedy, solace, balm, deliverance, mitigation, abatement, alleviation, easement, palliation, assuagement some rest from the intense concentration

9. calm, still, cool, quiet, pacific, peaceful, composed, serene, tranquil, at peace, sedate, placid, undisturbed, restful, untroubled, unperturbed, unruffled, unexcited with your mind at rest

10. asleep, resting, sleeping, napping, dormant, crashed out (slang), dozing, slumbering, snoozing (informal), fast asleep, sound asleep, out for the count, dead to the world (informal) She is at rest; don’t disturb her.


rest

2

noun

1. remainder, remains, excess, remnants, others, balance, surplus, residue, rump, leftovers, residuum The rest is thrown away.

verb

1. continue being, keep being, remain, stay, be left, go on being Of one thing we may rest assured.

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

rest 1

noun

1. A pause or interval, as from work or duty:

2. Freedom from labor, responsibility, or strain:

3. The act or fact of dying:

Slang: curtain (used in plural).

verb

1. To take repose by ceasing work or other effort for an interval of time:

2. To take repose, as by sleeping or lying quietly:

3. To have an inherent basis:

4. To provide a basis for:

phrasal verb
rest on or upon

To be determined by or contingent on something unknown, uncertain, or changeable:


rest 2

noun

What remains after a part has been used or subtracted:

The American Heritage® Roget’s Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

إسْتِراحَه ، راحَهالبقِيَّهباقيةبَقِيَّه، ما يَتَبَقّىراحَة

odpočívatzbytekspočívatodpočinekpodpěra

hvilehvile sigpauserestsøvn

lepolevätäloppunojapaikka

odmoriti seostatak

pihen

afgangurhvíla , taka sér hvíldhvíla, hallasthvílast, vera rólegurhvíld

休み休む

나머지쉬다

atbalstītatbalstsatlaistiesatlikumsatpūsties

rest

mať pokojodpočinúťpokoj

počitekpočivatipreostalipreostanekdrugi

vilavilopausliggarest

การพักผ่อนพักผ่อน

nghỉ ngơiphần còn lại

rest

1 [rest]

rest up (esp US) VI + ADVdescansar


rest

2 [rest] N the rest (= remainder) [of money, food, month] → el resto; [of people, things] → el resto, los/las demás
I’m taking the rest of the week offme tomaré el resto or lo que queda de la semana libre
the dog ate the restel perro se comió el resto or lo que sobró
you go home — I’ll do the resttú vete a casa, yo hago lo demás or lo que queda
I’ll take half of the money — you keep the restyo me llevo la mitad del dinero, tú te quedas con el resto
the rest of the moneyel resto del dinero
all the rest of the moneytodo lo que sobró del dinero
they left the rest of the meal untouchedno tocaron el resto de la comida
the rest stayed outsidelos demás se quedaron fuera
the rest of us will wait herelos demás esperaremos aquí
the rest of the boyslos otros chicos, los demás chicos
he was as drunk as the rest of themestaba tan borracho como los demás
the rest of them couldn’t care lessa los demás or a los otros les trae sin cuidado
what shall we give the rest of them?¿qué les daremos a los otros?
the rest of the soldierslos otros soldados, los demás soldados
I will take this book and you keep the restyo me llevo este libro y tú quédate con los demás
all the rest of the bookstodos los demás libros, todos los otros libros
it was just another grave like all the restno era más que otra tumba, como todas las demás or todas las otras
and all the rest (of it)etcétera, etcétera
he was from a wealthy family, went to Eton, Oxford and all the rest of itera de familia rica, estudió en Eton, Oxford etcétera, etcétera
she was a deb and all the rest of itera debutante y todo lo demás
(as) for the restpor lo demás
only there did his age show, for the rest, he might have been under seventysólo en eso se le notaba la edad, por lo demás, podía haber tenido menos de setenta años
see also history

Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

rest

[ˈrɛst]

vi

to let the matter rest → en rester là
I am not prepared to let this matter rest → Je ne suis pas prêt à en rester là.

(= be) rest assured that … → soyez assuré que …

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

rest

:

rest cure

nErholung f; (in bed) → Liegekur f


rest

1

vi

(= remain: decision, authority, blame, responsibility etc) → liegen (with bei); the matter must not rest thereman kann die Sache so nicht belassen; and there the matter rests for the momentund damit ist die Sache momentan erledigt; (you may) rest assured that …Sie können versichert sein, dass …

(= lean: person, head, ladder) → lehnen (→ on an +dat, → against gegen); (= be supported: roof etc) → ruhen (→ on auf +dat); (fig: eyes, gaze) → ruhen (→ on auf +dat); (fig: = be based, argument, case) → sich stützen (→ on auf +acc); (reputation)beruhen (→ on auf +dat); (responsibility)liegen, ruhen (→ on auf +dat); her elbows were resting on the tableihre Ellbogen waren auf den Tisch gestützt; her head was resting on the tableihr Kopf lag auf dem Tisch

vt

(= lean) ladderlehnen (→ against gegen, on an +acc); elbowstützen (→ on auf +acc); (fig) theory, suspicionsstützen (→ on auf +acc); to rest one’s hand on somebody’s shoulderjdm die Hand auf die Schulter legen; to rest one’s head on the tableden Kopf auf den Tisch legen; he rested his head against the waller lehnte den Kopf an die Wand


rest

2

n (= remainder)Rest m; the rest of the money/mealder Rest des Geldes/Essens, das übrige Geld/Essen; the rest of the boysder Rest der Jungen, die übrigen Jungen; you go off and the rest of us will wait hereihr geht, und der Rest von uns wartet hier; he was as drunk as the rest of themer war so betrunken wie der Rest or die übrigen; she’s no different from the restsie ist wie alle anderen; all the rest of the moneyder ganze Rest des Geldes, das ganze übrige Geld; all the rest of the booksalle übrigen Bücher; and all the rest of it (inf)und so weiter und so fort; Mary, Jane and all the rest of themMary, Jane und wie sie alle heißen; for the restim Übrigen

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

rest

1 [rɛst]

2. vt

a. (animal, dough) → (far) riposare
God rest his soul! → pace all’anima sua!
to rest one’s eyes or gaze on → posare lo sguardo su

b. (support, ladder, bicycle, head) to rest on/againstappoggiare su/contro


rest

2 [rɛst] n (remainder) the rest (of money, substance) → il resto; (of people, things) → gli altri/le altre pl
the rest of them → gli altri
the rest of us will go later → noialtri ci andiamo più tardi
can you carry the rest? → porti tu quello che rimane?

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

rest1

(rest) noun

1. a (usually short) period of not working etc after, or between periods of, effort; (a period of) freedom from worries etc. Digging the garden is hard work – let’s stop for a rest; Let’s have/take a rest; I need a rest from all these problems – I’m going to take a week’s holiday.

2. sleep. He needs a good night’s rest.

3. something which holds or supports. a book-rest; a headrest on a car seat.

4. a state of not moving. The machine is at rest.

verb

1. to (allow to) stop working etc in order to get new strength or energy. We’ve been walking for four hours – let’s stop and rest; Stop reading for a minute and rest your eyes; Let’s rest our legs.

2. to sleep; to lie or sit quietly in order to get new strength or energy, or because one is tired. Mother is resting at the moment.

3. to (make or allow to) lean, lie, sit, remain etc on or against something. Her head rested on his shoulder; He rested his hand on her arm; Her gaze rested on the jewels.

4. to relax, be calm etc. I will never rest until I know the murderer has been caught.

5. to (allow to) depend on. Our hopes now rest on him, since all else has failed.

6. (with with) (of a duty etc) to belong to. The choice rests with you.

ˈrestful adjective

1. bringing rest. a restful holiday.

2. (of colours, music etc) causing a person to feel calm and relaxed. Some people find blue a restful colour; After a hard day’s work, I like to listen to some restful music.

3. relaxed. at rest: The patient seems more restful now.

ˈrestfully adverbˈrestfulness nounˈrestless adjective

1. always moving; showing signs of worry, boredom, impatience etc. a restless child; He’s been doing the same job for years now and he’s beginning to get restless.

2. during which a person does not sleep. a restless night.

ˈrestlessly adverbˈrestlessness nounˈrest-room noun

(American) a toilet in a theatre, factory etc.

at rest

free from pain, worry etc.

come to rest

to stop moving. The ball came to rest under a tree.

lay to rest

to bury (someone) in a grave.

let the matter rest

to stop discussing etc a matter.

rest assured

to be certain. You may rest assured that we will take your views into consideration.

set someone’s mind at rest

to take away a person’s worries about something.


rest2

(rest) : the rest

1. what is left when part of something is taken away, finished etc. the rest of the meal.

2. all the other people, things etc. Jack went home, but the rest of us went to the cinema.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

rest

راحَة, يَسْتَريحُ odpočívat, zbytek hvile (sig), rest Pause, ruhen αναπαύομαι, υπόλοιπο reposar, reposo, resto lepo, levätä repos, se reposer odmoriti se, ostatak riposare, riposo 休み, 休む 나머지, 쉬다 rest, uitrusten hvile, rest odpocząć, odpoczynek descansar, descansar-se, resto отдых, отдыхать vila, vilopaus การพักผ่อน, พักผ่อน dinlenme, dinlenmek nghỉ ngơi, phần còn lại 休息

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

rest

n. descanso, reposo; residuo, resto;

___ curecura de reposo;

v. decansar, reposar.

English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

rest

n descanso, reposo; (remaining portion) demás, resto; the rest of the pills..las demás pastillas..el resto de las pastillas; at — en reposo; bed — reposo en cama; bowel — descanso or reposo del intestino; vt apoyar; Rest your arm here..Apoye su brazo aquí; vi descansar, reposar

English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

res·tau·rant

(rĕs′-tə-ränt′, -tər-ənt)

n.

A business establishment where meals are served to the public.


[French, restorative soup, restaurant, from present participle of

restaurer

, to restore, from Old French

restorer

; see restore.]

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

restaurant

(ˈrɛstəˌrɒŋ; ˈrɛstrɒŋ; -rɒnt)

n

a commercial establishment where meals are prepared and served to customers

[C19: from French, from restaurer to restore]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

res•tau•rant

(ˈrɛs tər ənt, -təˌrɑnt, -trɑnt)

n.

an establishment where meals are served to customers.

[1830–40, Amer.; < French, n. use of present participle of restaurer < Latin restaurāre to restore]

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun 1. restaurant - a building where people go to eatrestaurant — a building where people go to eat  

bistro — a small informal restaurant; serves wine

brasserie — a small restaurant serving beer and wine as well as food; usually cheap

brewpub — a combination brewery and restaurant; beer is brewed for consumption on the premises and served along with food

building, edifice — a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place; «there was a three-story building on the corner»; «it was an imposing edifice»

cafeteria — a restaurant where you serve yourself and pay a cashier

canteen — restaurant in a factory; where workers can eat

diner — a restaurant that resembles a dining car

greasy spoon — a small restaurant specializing in short-order fried foods

grill, grillroom — a restaurant where food is cooked on a grill

lunchroom — a restaurant (in a facility) where lunch can be purchased

rotisserie — a restaurant that specializes in roasted and barbecued meats

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

restaurant

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

Translations

restaurace

restaurant

restoracio

ravintola

restorangostionica

étteremvendéglő

veitingahúsveitingastaîur

レストラン食堂

식당

restoranas

restaurant

reštaurácia

restavracija

restaurang

ร้านอาหาร

nhà hàng

Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

restaurant

nRestaurant nt, → Gaststätte f; restaurant food/pricesRestaurantessen nt/-preise pl

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

restaurant

(ˈrestront) , ((American) -tərənt) noun

a place where meals may be bought and eaten.

ˈrestaurant-car noun

a carriage on a train in which meals are served to travellers.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

restaurant

مَطْعَم restaurace restaurant Restaurant εστιατόριο restaurante ravintola restaurant restoran ristorante レストラン 식당 restaurant restaurant restauracja restaurante ресторан restaurang ร้านอาหาร restoran nhà hàng 餐馆

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

  • Is there a restaurant on the campsite?
  • Can you recommend a good restaurant?

Collins Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

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noun

the refreshing quiet or repose of sleep: a good night’s rest.

refreshing ease or inactivity after exertion or labor: to allow an hour for rest.

relief or freedom, especially from anything that wearies, troubles, or disturbs.

a period or interval of inactivity, repose, solitude, or tranquility: to go away for a rest.

mental or spiritual calm; tranquility: At a high-pressure job like this, you need all the emotional rest you can get.

the repose of death: eternal rest.

cessation or absence of motion: to bring a machine to rest.

Music.

  1. an interval of silence between tones.
  2. a mark or sign indicating an interval of silence between tones.

Prosody. a short pause within a line; caesura.

a place that provides shelter or lodging for travelers, as an inn.

any stopping or resting place: a roadside rest for weary hikers.

a piece or thing for something to rest on: a hand rest.

a supporting device; support.

verb (used without object)

to refresh oneself, as by sleeping, lying down, or relaxing.

to relieve weariness by cessation of exertion or labor.

to be at ease; have tranquility or peace: to practice meditation as a way to rest and regroup.

to repose in death.

to be quiet or still.

to cease from motion, come to rest; stop.

to become or remain inactive.

to stay as is or remain without further action or notice: to let a matter rest.

to lie, sit, lean, or be set: His arm rested on the table.

Agriculture. to lie fallow or unworked: to let land rest.

to be imposed as a burden or responsibility (usually followed by on or upon).

to rely (usually followed by on or upon).

to be based or founded (usually followed by on or upon).

to be found; belong; reside (often followed by with): The blame rests with them.

to be present; dwell; linger (usually followed by on or upon): A sunbeam rests upon the altar.

to be fixed or directed on something, as the eyes, a gaze, etc.

Law. to terminate voluntarily the introduction of evidence in a case.

verb (used with object)

to give rest to; refresh with rest: to rest oneself.

to lay or place for rest, ease, or support: to rest one’s back against a tree.

to direct (as the eyes): to rest one’s gaze upon someone.

to base, or let depend, as on some ground of reliance.

Law. to terminate voluntarily the introduction of evidence on: to rest one’s case.

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Idioms about rest

    at rest,

    1. in a state of repose, as in sleep.
    2. dead.
    3. quiescent; inactive; not in motion: the inertia of an object at rest.
    4. free from worry; tranquil: Nothing could put his mind at rest.

    lay to rest,

    1. to inter (a dead body); bury: He was laid to rest last Thursday.
    2. to allay, suppress, or appease.

Origin of rest

1

First recorded before 900; Middle English noun rest(e), rast(e), Old English reste, ræst; akin to German Rast; the verb is derivative of the noun

OTHER WORDS FROM rest

rest·er, noun

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH rest

rest , wrest

Words nearby rest

responsory, responsum, respray, res publica, ressentiment, rest, restage, rest area, restart, rest assured, restate

Other definitions for rest (2 of 3)


noun

the part that is left or remains; remainder: The rest of the students are in the corridor.

the others: All the rest are going.

verb (used without object)

to continue to be; remain as specified: Rest assured that all is well.

Origin of rest

2

First recorded in 1375–1425; late Middle English verb resten “to remain due or unpaid,” from Middle French rester “to remain,” from Latin restāre “to remain standing, linger, stay put” equivalent to re- prefix + stāre “to stand, stand up, be standing”; noun derivative of the verb; see re-, stand

Other definitions for rest (3 of 3)

Origin of rest

3

First recorded in 1490–1500; shortening of arrest

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Words related to rest

vacation, others, breathe, lean, lie down, relax, sit down, stretch out, lay, pause, prop, settle, sit, stand, hang, reside, stay, break, breather, calm

How to use rest in a sentence

  • There’s a built-in water bottle compartment for when you need to take a rest, plus a pocket for phone storage.

  • Over 60% of its revenues come from subscriptions, the rest from ads and events.

  • By 2040, it wants to achieve this goal for the rest of the world.

  • If Scheffler’s hadn’t hooked me up with empties, I’d be eating three meals of olives a day right now—and for the rest of the year—with no regrets.

  • Colin Rusch, analyst at investment bank Oppenheimer, said he expects more stock market volatility during the rest of the year.

  • These two videos rest atop bookmarked links to The Jeffrey Epstein Foundation.

  • I will turn my nose up when you offer me the rest of some delicious pastry that you nibbled on.

  • Hopefully, she got as much of a laugh out of it as the rest of the world has.

  • They let us get ahead of the outfit, then the rest of the guys came in.

  • Egypt has a comparatively low number of HIV cases compared to the rest of Africa, with just 11,000 infected people nationwide.

  • Edna Pontellier, casting her eyes about, had finally kept them at rest upon the sea.

  • He worketh under correction, and seeketh to rest: let his hands be idle, and he seeketh liberty.

  • We had half a dozen passengers to Ferrara; for the rest of the way, I had this extensive traveling establishment to myself.

  • If he continue, he shall leave a name above a thousand: and if he rest, it shall be to his advantage.

  • Captains Spotstroke and Pool were equally careful; the rest of those present drank freely.

British Dictionary definitions for rest (1 of 2)


noun

  1. relaxation from exertion or labour
  2. (as modifier)a rest period

repose; sleep

any relief or refreshment, as from worry or something troublesome

calm; tranquillity

death regarded as reposeeternal rest

cessation from motion

at rest

  1. not moving; still
  2. calm; tranquil
  3. dead
  4. asleep

a pause or interval

a mark in a musical score indicating a pause of specific duration

prosody a pause in or at the end of a line; caesura

a shelter or lodginga seaman’s rest

a thing or place on which to put something for support or to steady it; prop

billiards snooker any of various special poles used as supports for the cue in shots that cannot be made using the hand as a support

come to rest to slow down and stop

lay to rest to bury (a dead person)

set someone’s mind at rest to reassure someone or settle someone’s mind

verb

to take or give rest, as by sleeping, lying down, etc

to place or position (oneself, etc) for rest or relaxation

(tr) to place or position for support or steadyingto rest one’s elbows on the table

(intr) to be at ease; be calm

to cease or cause to cease from motion or exertion; halt

to lie dead and buried

(intr) to remain without further attention or actionlet the matter rest

to direct (one’s eyes) or (of one’s eyes) to be directedher eyes rested on the sleeping child

to depend or cause to depend; base; relythe whole argument rests on one crucial fact

to place or be placed, as blame, censure, etc

to put pastry in a cool place to allow the gluten to contract

(intr ; foll by with, on, upon, etc) to be a responsibility (of)it rests with us to apportion blame

law to finish the introduction of evidence in (a case)

rest on one’s oars

  1. to stop rowing for a time
  2. to stop doing anything for a time

Derived forms of rest

rester, noun

Word Origin for rest

Old English ræst, reste, of Germanic origin; related to Gothic rasta a mile, Old Norse röst mile

British Dictionary definitions for rest (2 of 2)


noun the rest

something left or remaining; remainder

the othersthe rest of the world

verb

(copula) to continue to be (as specified); remainrest assured

Word Origin for rest

C15: from Old French rester to remain, from Latin rēstāre, from re- + stāre to stand

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Idioms and Phrases with rest


In addition to the idioms beginning with rest

  • rest assured
  • rest on one’s laurels

also see:

  • at rest
  • lay at rest
  • lay to rest
  • set one’s mind at rest

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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[ res-tuh-rahnt, -trahnt ]

/ ˈrɛs təˌrɑnt, -trɑnt /

See the most commonly confused word associated with

bistro

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.


noun

an establishment where meals are served to customers.

COMPARE MEANINGS

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Which sentence is correct?

Origin of restaurant

An Americanism first recorded in 1820–30; from French, noun use of present participle of restaurer, from Latin restaurāre “to restore, reestablish”; cf. re-, store

Words nearby restaurant

restage, rest area, restart, rest assured, restate, restaurant, restaurant car, restaurateur, rest cure, rest energy, restful

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Words related to restaurant

bar, cafeteria, coffee shop, diner, dining room, inn, outlet, saloon, canteen, chophouse, drive-in, eatery, grill, hideaway, joint, lunchroom, pizzeria, café, dive, greasy spoon

How to use restaurant in a sentence

  • The awards might be off, but the volunteer committee that orchestrates the restaurant and chef awards has made known to the foundation’s chairman that their “faith in the Foundation has been shaken.”

  • Which is just one more reason restaurants should be getting a bailout instead of having to risk people’s health to stay afloat.

  • The pandemic has upended industry norms, pushing restaurants to add service charges and raise wages

  • Spice companies like Penzeys and Spicewalla, as well as restaurants, have been selling more mixes than ever.

  • Everyone knows restaurants are struggling—Tom Colicchio tweeted that with outdoor dining, his restaurants are doing just 20 percent of their usual business.

  • The gunman then burst from the restaurant and fled down the street with the other man.

  • Any restaurant with a sustained fame ends up becoming a set, of sorts, and on that front, Sotto Sotto cinched it.

  • When I saw the fire in the restaurant, I ran down to the floor below, where I was trapped between flames above and below.

  • It’s nothing for someone to walk up to me in the store or at a restaurant and ask for an autograph or speak to me.

  • I learned that he was working and living in the Lower East Side, delivering orders for an Italian restaurant and raising two kids.

  • I often recall the farewell lunch we had together at the Restaurant de Paris, in the Escolta.

  • There was much movement, life, laughter, carriages in the street driving from restaurant to theatre.

  • He remembers the good dinners at the little restaurant near his studio, where they dined among the old crowd.

  • Below it is the café and restaurant de la Rotonde, a very well-built looking place, with its rounding façade on the corner.

  • She will hunt for some small restaurant, sacred in its exclusiveness and known only to a dozen bon camarades of the Quarter.

British Dictionary definitions for restaurant

restaurant

/ (ˈrɛstəˌrɒŋ, ˈrɛstrɒŋ, -rɒnt) /


noun

a commercial establishment where meals are prepared and served to customers

Word Origin for restaurant

C19: from French, from restaurer to restore

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other forms: rested; resting; rests

To rest means to relax into something and let it support you. Rest yourself on the couch for a while, if you’re tired.

The word rest comes from the German rasta meaning «league of miles.» If you walked that far, you’d need a good rest too. Whatever way you choose to use the word rest — whether it’s something you do, something you take, or something you put your arm up on — you’re describing a moment of stillness and calm. Rest also means «the stuff left over.» Who will eat the rest of the cookies when you have to rest from eating so many of them?

Definitions of rest

  1. verb

    take a short break from one’s activities in order to relax

  2. see moresee less

    Antonyms:

    be active, move

    be in a state of action

    types:

    show 8 types…
    hide 8 types…
    catch some Z’s, kip, log Z’s, sleep, slumber

    be asleep

    drowse

    be on the verge of sleeping

    bundle, practice bundling

    sleep fully clothed in the same bed with one’s betrothed

    catch a wink, catnap, nap

    take a siesta

    sleep in, sleep late

    sleep later than usual or customary

    hibernate, hole up

    sleep during winter

    aestivate, estivate

    sleep during summer

    nod

    be almost asleep

    type of:

    recline, recumb, repose

    lean in a comfortable resting position

  3. verb

    rest on or as if on a pillow

  4. “He
    rested his bad leg”

    Rest the dogs for a moment”

  5. verb

    be inactive, refrain from acting

    “The committee is
    resting over the summer”

  6. noun

    a pause for relaxation

    “people actually accomplish more when they take time for short
    rests

    synonyms:

    relief, respite, rest period

  7. noun

    freedom from activity (work or strain or responsibility)

  8. noun

    euphemism for death (based on an analogy between lying in a bed and in a tomb)

    “she was laid to
    rest beside her husband”

    synonyms:

    eternal rest, eternal sleep, quietus, sleep

  9. verb

    stay the same; remain in a certain state

    rest assured”

    synonyms:

    remain, stay

  10. verb

    not move; be in a resting position

  11. verb

    put something in a resting position, as for support or steadying

    Rest your head on my shoulder”

  12. verb

    have a place in relation to something else

    “The responsibility
    rests with the Allies”

    synonyms:

    lie

    lie

    be located or situated somewhere; occupy a certain position

  13. “a body will continue in a state of
    rest until acted upon”

  14. noun

    a support on which things can be put

  15. verb

    be inherent or innate in;

  16. noun

    a musical notation indicating a silence of a specified duration

    see moresee less

    types:

    whole rest

    a musical rest equal in duration to four beats in common time

    half rest

    a musical rest having the time value of half a whole rest or equal in duration to two beats in common time

    quarter rest

    a musical rest having one-fourth the time value of a whole rest

    type of:

    musical notation

    (music) notation used by musicians

  17. noun

    something left after other parts have been taken away

    “he threw away the
    rest

    synonyms:

    balance, remainder, residual, residue, residuum

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A restaurant is a business that prepares and serves food and drinks to customers.[1] Meals are generally served and eaten on the premises, but many restaurants also offer take-out and food delivery services. Restaurants vary greatly in appearance and offerings, including a wide variety of cuisines and service models ranging from inexpensive fast-food restaurants and cafeterias to mid-priced family restaurants, to high-priced luxury establishments.

Etymology[edit]

The word derives from the early 19th century, taken from the French word restaurer ‘provide food for’, literally ‘restore to a former state’[2] and, being the present participle of the verb,[3] The term restaurant may have been used in 1507 as a «restorative beverage», and in correspondence in 1521 to mean ‘that which restores the strength, a fortifying food or remedy’.[4]

History[edit]

Service counter of a thermopolium in Pompeii

A public eating establishment similar to a restaurant is mentioned in a 512 BC record from Ancient Egypt. It served only one dish, a plate of cereal, wild fowl, and onions.[5]

A forerunner of the modern restaurant is the thermopolium, an establishment in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome that sold and served ready-to-eat food and beverages. These establishments were somewhat similar in function to modern fast food restaurants. They were most often frequented by people who lacked private kitchens. In the Roman Empire they were popular among residents of insulae.[6]

In Pompeii, 158 thermopolia with service counters have been identified throughout the town. They were concentrated along the main axis of the town and the public spaces where they were frequented by the locals.[7]

The Romans also had the popina, a wine bar which in addition to a variety of wines offered a limited selection of simple foods such as olives, bread, cheese, stews, sausage, and porridge. The popinae were known as places for the plebeians of the lower classes of Roman society to socialize. While some were confined to one standing room only, others had tables and stools and a few even had couches.[8][9]

Another early forerunner of the restaurant was the inn. Throughout the ancient world, inns were set up alongside roads to cater to people travelling between cities, offering lodging and food. Meals were typically served at a common table to guests. However, there were no menus or options to choose from.[10]

The Arthashastra references establishments where prepared food was sold in ancient India. One regulation states that «those who trade in cooked rice, liquor, and flesh» are to live in the south of the city. Another states that superintendents of storehouses may give surpluses of bran and flour to «those who prepare cooked rice, and rice-cakes», while a regulation involving city superintendents references «sellers of cooked flesh and cooked rice».[11]

Early eating establishments recognizable as restaurants in the modern sense emerged in Song dynasty China during the 11th and 12th centuries. In large cities, such as Kaifeng and Hangzhou, food catering establishments catered to merchants who travelled between cities. Probably growing out of tea houses and taverns which catered to travellers, Kaifeng’s restaurants blossomed into an industry that catered to locals as well as people from other regions of China. As travelling merchants were not used to the local cuisine of other cities, these establishments were set up to serve dishes familiar to merchants from other parts of China. Such establishments were located in the entertainment districts of major cities, alongside hotels, bars, and brothels. The larger and more opulent of these establishments offered a dining experience similar to modern restaurant culture. According to a Chinese manuscript from 1126, patrons of one such establishment were greeted with a selection of pre-plated demonstration dishes which represented food options. Customers had their orders taken by a team of waiters who would then sing their orders to the kitchen and distribute the dishes in the exact order in which they had been ordered.[12][13]

There is a direct correlation between the growth of the restaurant businesses and institutions of theatrical stage drama, gambling and prostitution which served the burgeoning merchant middle class during the Song dynasty.[14] Restaurants catered to different styles of cuisine, price brackets, and religious requirements. Even within a single restaurant choices were available, and people ordered the entrée from written menus.[13] An account from 1275 writes of Hangzhou, the capital city for the last half of the dynasty:

The people of Hangzhou are very difficult to please. Hundreds of orders are given on all sides: this person wants something hot, another something cold, a third something tepid, a fourth something chilled. one wants cooked food, another raw, another chooses roast, another grill.[15]

The restaurants in Hangzhou also catered to many northern Chinese who had fled south from Kaifeng during the Jurchen invasion of the 1120s, while it is also known that many restaurants were run by families formerly from Kaifeng.[16]

In Japan, a restaurant culture emerged in the 16th century out of local tea houses. Tea house owner Sen no Rikyū created the kaiseki multi-course meal tradition, and his grandsons expanded the tradition to include speciality dishes and cutlery which matched the aesthetic of the food.[12]

In Europe, inns which offered food and lodgings and taverns where food was served alongside alcoholic beverages were common into the Middle Ages and Renaissance. They typically served common fare of the type normally available to peasants. In Spain, such establishments were called bodegas and served tapas. In England, they typically served foods such as sausage and shepherd’s pie.[10] Cookshops were also common in European cities during the Middle Ages. These were establishments which served dishes such as pies, puddings, sauces, fish, and baked meats. Customers could either buy a ready-made meal or bring their own meat to be cooked. As only large private homes had the means for cooking, the inhabitants of European cities were significantly reliant on them.[17]

France in particular has a rich history with the development of various forms of inns and eateries, eventually to form many of the now-ubiquitous elements of the modern restaurant. As far back as the thirteenth century, French inns served a variety of food — bread, cheese, bacon, roasts, soups, and stews — usually eaten at a common table. Parisians could buy what was essentially take-out food from rôtisseurs, who prepared roasted meat dishes, and pastry-cooks, who could prepare meat pies and often more elaborate dishes. Municipal statutes stated that the official prices per item were to be posted at the entrance; this was the first official mention of menus.[18]

Taverns also served food, as did cabarets. A cabaret, however, unlike a tavern, served food at tables with tablecloths, provided drinks with the meal, and charged by the customers’ choice of dish, rather than by the pot.[19] Cabarets were reputed to serve better food than taverns and a few, such as the Petit Maure, became well known. A few cabarets had musicians or singing, but most, until the late 19th century, were simply convivial eating places.[18][19] The first café opened in Paris in 1672 at the Saint-Germain fair. By 1723 there were nearly four hundred cafés in Paris, but their menu was limited to simpler dishes or confectionaries, such as coffee, tea, chocolate (the drink; chocolate in solid state was invented only in the 19th century), ice creams, pastries, and liqueurs.[19]

At the end of the 16th century, the guild of cook-caterers (later known as «traiteurs») was given its own legal status. The traiteurs dominated sophisticated food service, delivering or preparing meals for the wealthy at their residences. Taverns and cabarets were limited to serving little more than roast or grilled meats. Towards the end of the seventeenth century, both inns and then traiteurs began to offer «host’s tables» (tables d’hôte), where one paid a set price to sit at a large table with other guests and eat a fixed menu meal.[18]

Modern format[edit]

The earliest modern-format «restaurants» to use that word in Paris were the establishments which served bouillon, a broth made of meat and egg which was said to restore health and vigour. The first restaurant of this kind was opened in 1765 or 1766 by Mathurin Roze de Chantoiseau on rue des Poulies, now part of the Rue de Louvre.[20] The name of the owner is sometimes given as Boulanger.[21] Unlike earlier eating places, it was elegantly decorated, and besides meat broth offered a menu of several other «restorative» dishes, including macaroni. Chantoiseau and other chefs took the title «traiteurs-restaurateurs».[21] While not the first establishment where one could order food, or even soups, it is thought to be the first to offer a menu of available choices.[22]

In the Western world, the concept of a restaurant as a public venue where waiting staff serve patrons food from a fixed menu is a relatively recent one, dating from the late 18th century.[23] Modern restaurant culture originated in France during the 1780s.

In June 1786, the Provost of Paris issued a decree giving the new kind of eating establishment official status, authorising restaurateurs to receive clients and to offer them meals until eleven in the evening in winter and midnight in summer.[21] Ambitious cooks from noble households began to open more elaborate eating places. The first luxury restaurant in Paris, the La Grande Taverne de Londres, was opened at the Palais-Royal at the beginning of 1786 by Antoine Beauvilliers, the former chef of the Count of Provence. It had mahogany tables, linen tablecloths, chandeliers, well-dressed and trained waiters, a long wine list and an extensive menu of elaborately prepared and presented dishes.[21] Dishes on its menu included partridge with cabbage, veal chops grilled in buttered paper, and duck with turnips.[24] This is considered to have been the «first real restaurant».[25][22] According to Brillat-Savarin, the restaurant was «the first to combine the four essentials of an elegant room, smart waiters, a choice cellar, and superior cooking».[26][27][28]

The aftermath of the French Revolution saw the number of restaurants skyrocket. Due to the mass emigration of nobles from the country, many cooks from aristocratic households who were left unemployed went on to found new restaurants.[29][10] One restaurant was started in 1791 by Méot, the former chef of the Duke of Orleans, which offered a wine list with twenty-two choices of red wine and twenty-seven of white wine. By the end of the century there were a collection of luxury restaurants at the Grand-Palais: Huré, the Couvert espagnol; Février; the Grotte flamande; Véry, Masse and the Café de Chartres (still open, now Le Grand Véfour)[21]

In 1802 the term was applied to an establishment where restorative foods, such as bouillon, a meat broth, were served («établissement de restaurateur»).[30] The closure of culinary guilds and societal changes resulting from the industrial revolution contributed significantly to the increased prevalence of restaurants in Europe.[31]

Types[edit]

Restaurants are classified or distinguished in many different ways. The primary factors are usually the food itself (e.g. vegetarian, seafood, steak); the cuisine (e.g. Italian, Korean, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, French, Mexican, Thai) or the style of offering (e.g. tapas bar, a sushi train, a tastet restaurant, a buffet restaurant or a yum cha restaurant). Beyond this, restaurants may differentiate themselves on factors including speed (see fast food), formality, location, cost, service, or novelty themes (such as automated restaurants). Some of these also include fine dining, casual dining, contemporary casual, family style, fast casual, fast food, cafes, buffet, concession stands, food trucks, pop-up restaurants, diners, and ghost restaurants.

Restaurant Basilica at the shoreline of Kellosaarenranta by night in Ruoholahti, Helsinki, Finland

Restaurants range from inexpensive and informal lunching or dining places catering to people working nearby, with modest food served in simple settings at low prices, to expensive establishments serving refined food and fine wines in a formal setting. In the former case, customers usually wear casual clothing. In the latter case, depending on culture and local traditions, customers might wear semi-casual, semi-formal or formal wear. Typically, at mid- to high-priced restaurants, customers sit at tables, their orders are taken by a waiter, who brings the food when it is ready. After eating, the customers then pay the bill. In some restaurants, such as those in workplaces, there are usually no waiters; the customers use trays, on which they place cold items that they select from a refrigerated container and hot items which they request from cooks, and then they pay a cashier before they sit down. Another restaurant approach which uses few waiters is the buffet restaurant. Customers serve food onto their own plates and then pay at the end of the meal. Buffet restaurants typically still have waiters to serve drinks and alcoholic beverages. Fast food establishments are also considered to be restaurants. In addition, food trucks are another popular option for people who want quick food service.

Tourists around the world can enjoy dining services on railway dining cars and cruise ship dining rooms, which are essentially travelling restaurants. Many railway dining services also cater to the needs of travellers by providing railway refreshment rooms at railway stations. Many cruise ships provide a variety of dining experiences including a main restaurant, satellite restaurants, room service, speciality restaurants, cafes, bars and buffets to name a few. Some restaurants on these cruise ships require table reservations and operate specific dress codes.[33]

Restaurant staff[edit]

A restaurant’s proprietor is called a restaurateur, this derives from the French verb restaurer, meaning «to restore». Professional cooks are called chefs, with there being various finer distinctions (e.g. sous-chef, chef de partie). Most restaurants (other than fast food restaurants and cafeterias) will have various waiting staff to serve food, beverages and alcoholic drinks, including busboys who remove used dishes and cutlery. In finer restaurants, this may include a host or hostess, a maître d’hôtel to welcome customers and to seat them, and a sommelier or wine waiter to help patrons select wines. A new route to becoming a restaurateur, rather than working one’s way up through the stages, is to operate a food truck. Once a sufficient following has been obtained, a permanent restaurant site can be opened. This trend has become common in the UK and the US.

Chef’s table[edit]

«Chef’s table» redirects here. For the Netflix documentary series, see Chef’s Table.

A chef’s table is a table located in the kitchen of a restaurant,[34][35] reserved for VIPs and special guests.[36] Patrons may be served a themed[36] tasting menu prepared and served by the head chef. Restaurants can require a minimum party[37] and charge a higher flat fee.[38] Because of the demand on the kitchen’s facilities, chef’s tables are generally only available during off-peak times.[39]

By country[edit]

Europe[edit]

France[edit]

France has a long tradition with public eateries and modern restaurant culture emerged there. In the early 19th century, traiteurs and restaurateurs became known simply as «restaurateurs». The use of the term «restaurant» for the establishment itself only became common in the 19th century.

According to the legend, the first mention to a restaurant dates back to 1765 in Paris. It was located on Rue des Poulies, now Rue du Louvre, and use to serve dishes known as «restaurants».[40] The place was run by a man named Mr. Boulanger.[41] However, according to the Larousse Gastronomique, La Grande Taverne de Londres which opened in 1782 is considered as the first Parisian restaurant.[42]

The first restaurant guide, called Almanach des Gourmands, written by Grimod de La Reyniére, was published in 1804. During the French Restoration period, the most celebrated restaurant was the Rocher de Cancale, frequented by the characters of Balzac. In the middle of the century, Balzac’s characters moved to the Café Anglais, which in 1867 also hosted the famous Three Emperors Dinner hosted by Napoleon III in honor of Tsar Alexander II, Kaiser Wilhelm I and Otto von Bismarck during the Exposition Universelle in 1867[43]

Other restaurants that occupy a place in French history and literature include Maxim’s and Fouquet’s. The restaurant of Hotel Ritz Paris, opened in 1898, was made famous by its chef, Auguste Escoffier. The 19th century also saw the appearance of new kinds of more modest restaurants, including the bistrot. The brasserie featured beer and was made popular during the 1867 Paris Exposition.[21]

North America[edit]

United States[edit]

In the United States, it was not until the late 18th century that establishments that provided meals without also providing lodging began to appear in major metropolitan areas in the form of coffee and oyster houses. The actual term «restaurant» did not enter into the common parlance until the following century. Prior to being referred to as «restaurants» these eating establishments assumed regional names such as «eating house» in New York City, «restorator» in Boston, or «victualling house» in other areas. Restaurants were typically located in populous urban areas during the 19th century and grew both in number and sophistication in the mid-century due to a more affluent middle class and to urbanization. The highest concentration of these restaurants were in the West, followed by industrial cities on the Eastern Seaboard.

When Prohibition went into effect in 1920, restaurants offering fine dining had a hard time making ends meet because they had depended on profits from selling wine and alcoholic beverages. Replacing them were establishments offering simpler, more casual experiences such as cafeterias, roadside restaurants, and diners. When Prohibition ended in the 1930s, luxury restaurants slowly started to appear again as the economy recovered from the Great Depression.[45]

The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed segregation based on race, color, religion, or national origin in all public accommodations engaged in interstate commerce, including restaurants. Katzenbach v. McClung, 379 U.S. 294 (1964), was a decision of the US Supreme Court which held that Congress acted within its power under the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution in forbidding racial discrimination in restaurants as this was a burden to interstate commerce.[46][47]

In the 1970s, there was one restaurant for every 7,500 persons. In 2016, there were 1,000,000 restaurants; one for every 310 people. The average person eats out five to six times weekly. 3.3% of the nation’s workforce is composed of restaurant workers.[48] According to a Gallup Poll in 2016, nearly 61% of Americans across the country eat out at a restaurant once a week or more, and this percent is only predicted to increase in future years.[49] Before the COVID-19 pandemic, The National Restaurant Association estimated restaurant sales of $899 billion in 2020. The association now projects that the pandemic will decrease that to $675 billion, a decline of $274 billion over their previous estimate.[50]

South America[edit]

Brazil[edit]

In Brazil, restaurant varieties mirror the multitude of nationalities that arrived in the country: Japanese, Arab, German, Italian, Portuguese and many more.

Colombia[edit]

The word piquete can be used to refer to a common Colombian type of meal that includes meat, yuca and potatoes, which is a type of meal served at a piqueteaderos. The verb form of the word piquete, piquetear, means to participate in binging, liquor drinking, and leisure activities in popular areas or open spaces.[51]

Peru[edit]

In Peru, many indigenous, Spanish, and Chinese dishes are frequently found. Because of recent immigration from places such as China, and Japan, there are many Chinese and Japanese restaurants around the country, especially in the capital city of Lima.

Guides[edit]

Restaurant guides review restaurants, often ranking them or providing information to guide consumers (type of food, handicap accessibility, facilities, etc.). One of the most famous contemporary guides is the Michelin series of guides which accord from 1 to 3 stars to restaurants they perceive to be of high culinary merit. Restaurants with stars in the Michelin guide are formal, expensive establishments; in general the more stars awarded, the higher the prices.

The main competitor to the Michelin guide in Europe is the guidebook series published by Gault Millau. Its ratings are on a scale of 1 to 20, with 20 being the highest.

In the United States, the Forbes Travel Guide (previously the Mobil travel guides) and the AAA rate restaurants on a similar 1 to 5 star (Forbes) or diamond (AAA) scale. Three, four, and five star/diamond ratings are roughly equivalent to the Michelin one, two, and three star ratings while one and two star ratings typically indicate more casual places to eat. In 2005, Michelin released a New York City guide, its first for the United States. The popular Zagat Survey compiles individuals’ comments about restaurants but does not pass an «official» critical assessment.

Nearly all major American newspapers employ food critics and publish online dining guides for the cities they serve. Some news sources provide customary reviews of restaurants, while others may provide more of a general listings service.

More recently Internet sites have started up that publish both food critic reviews and popular reviews by the general public.

Economics[edit]

Canada[edit]

There are 86,915 commercial food service units in Canada, or 26.4 units per 10,000 Canadians. By segment, there are:[52]

  • 38,797 full-service restaurants
  • 34,629 limited-service restaurants
  • 741 contract and social caterers
  • 6,749 drinking places

Fully 63% of restaurants in Canada are independent brands. Chain restaurants account for the remaining 37%, and many of these are locally owned and operated franchises.[53]

European Union[edit]

The EU-27 has an estimated 1.6m businesses involved in ‘accommodation & food services’, more than 75% of which are small and medium enterprises.[54]

India[edit]

The Indian restaurant industry is highly fragmented with more than 1.5 million outlets of which only around 3000 of them are from the organised segment.[55] The organised segment includes quick service restaurants; casual dining; cafes; fine dining; and pubs, bars, clubs, and lounges.

United States[edit]

As of 2006, there are approximately 215,000 full-service restaurants in the United States, accounting for $298 billion in sales, and approximately 250,000 limited-service (fast food) restaurants, accounting for $260 billion.[56] Starting in 2016, Americans spent more on restaurants than groceries.[57]
In October 2017, The New York Times reported there are 620,000 eating and drinking places in the United States, according to the Bureau of Labour Statistics. They also reported that the number of restaurants are growing almost twice as fast as the population.[58]

One study of new restaurants in Cleveland, Ohio found that 1 in 4 changed ownership or went out of business after one year, and 6 out of 10 did so after three years. (Not all changes in ownership are indicative of financial failure.)[59] The three-year failure rate for franchises was nearly the same.[60]

Restaurants employed 912,100 cooks in 2013, earning an average $9.83 per hour.[61] The waiting staff numbered 4,438,100 in 2012, earning an average $8.84 per hour.[62]

Jiaxi Lu of the Washington Post reports in 2014 that, «Americans are spending $683.4 billion a year dining out, and they are also demanding better food quality and greater variety from restaurants to make sure their money is well spent.»[63]

Dining in restaurants has become increasingly popular, with the proportion of meals consumed outside the home in restaurants or institutions rising from 25% in 1950 to 46% in 1990. This is caused by factors such as the growing numbers of older people, who are often unable or unwilling to cook their meals at home and the growing number of single-parent households. It is also caused by the convenience that restaurants can afford people; the growth of restaurant popularity is also correlated with the growing length of the work day in the US, as well as the growing number of single parent households.[64] Eating in restaurants has also become more popular with the growth of higher income households. At the same time, less expensive establishments such as fast food establishments can be quite inexpensive, making restaurant eating accessible to many.

Employment[edit]

The restaurant industry in the United States is large and quickly growing, with 10 million workers. 1 in every 12 U.S. residents work in the business, and during the 2008 recession, the industry was an anomaly in that it continued to grow. Restaurants are known for having low wages, which they claim are due to thin profit margins of 4-5%. For comparison, however, Walmart has a 1% profit margin.[65]
As a result of these low wages, restaurant employees suffer from three times the poverty rate as other U.S. workers, and use food stamps twice as much.[65]
Restaurants are the largest employer of people of color, and rank as the second largest employer of immigrants. These workers statistically are concentrated in the lowest paying positions in the restaurant industry. In the restaurant industry, 39% of workers earn minimum wage or lower.[65]

Regulations[edit]

In many countries, restaurants are subject to inspections by health inspectors to maintain standards for public health, such as maintaining proper hygiene and cleanliness. The most common kind of violations of inspection reports are those concerning the storage of cold food at appropriate temperatures, proper sanitation of equipment, regular hand washing and proper disposal of harmful chemicals. Simple steps can be taken to improve sanitation in restaurants. As sickness is easily spread through touch, restaurants are encouraged to regularly wipe down tables, door knobs and menus.[66]

Depending on local customs, legislation and the establishment, restaurants may or may not serve alcoholic beverages. Restaurants are often prohibited from selling alcoholic beverages without a meal by alcohol sale laws; such sale is considered to be activity for bars, which are meant to have more severe restrictions. Some restaurants are licensed to serve alcohol («fully licensed»), or permit customers to «bring your own» alcohol (BYO / BYOB). In some places restaurant licenses may restrict service to beer, or wine and beer.[67]

Occupational hazards[edit]

Food service regulations have historically been built around hygiene and protection of the consumer’s health.[68] However, restaurant workers face many health hazards such as long hours, low wages, minimal benefits, discrimination, high stress, and poor working conditions.[68] Along with the COVID-19 pandemic, much attention has been drawn to the prevention of community transmission in restaurants and other public settings.[69] To reduce airborne disease transmission, the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention recommends reduced dining capacity, face masks, adequate ventilation, physical barrier instalments, disinfection, signage, and flexible leave policies for workers.[70]

See also[edit]

  • Lists of restaurants

References[edit]

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  3. ^ «Conjugaison de restaurer — WordReference.com». wordreference.com.
  4. ^ «ce qui répare les forces, aliment ou remède fortifiant» (Marguerite d’Angoulême ds Briçonnet, volume 1, p. 70)
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  61. ^ BLS, «Occupational Outlook Handbook: Food and Beverage Serving and Related Workers» (January 8, 2014) online
  62. ^ Jiaxi Lu, «Consumer Reports: McDonald’s burger ranked worst in the U.S.,» [1]
  63. ^ Nestle, Marion (1994). «Traditional Models of Healthy Eating: Alternatives to ‘techno-food’«. Journal of Nutrition Education. 26 (5): 241–45. doi:10.1016/s0022-3182(12)80898-3.
  64. ^ a b c Jayaraman, Saru (Summer 2014). «Feeding America: Immigrants in the Restaurant Industry and Throughout the Food System Take Action for Change». Social Research. 81 (2): 347–358. doi:10.1353/sor.2014.0019.
  65. ^ Sibel Roller (2012). «10». Essential Microbiology and Hygiene for Food Professionals. CRC Press. ISBN 9781444121490.
  66. ^ Danny May; Andy Sharpe (2004). The Only Wine Book You’ll Ever Need. Adams Media. p. 221. ISBN 9781440518935.
  67. ^ a b Lippert, Julia; Rosing, Howard; Tendick‐Matesanz, Felipe (July 2020). «The health of restaurant work: A historical and social context to the occupational health of food service». American Journal of Industrial Medicine. 63 (7): 563–576. doi:10.1002/ajim.23112. ISSN 0271-3586. PMID 32329097. S2CID 216110536.
  68. ^ Morawska, Lidia; Tang, Julian W.; Bahnfleth, William; Bluyssen, Philomena M.; Boerstra, Atze; Buonanno, Giorgio; Cao, Junji; Dancer, Stephanie; Floto, Andres; Franchimon, Francesco; Haworth, Charles (September 1, 2020). «How can airborne transmission of COVID-19 indoors be minimised?». Environment International. 142: 105832. doi:10.1016/j.envint.2020.105832. ISSN 0160-4120. PMC 7250761. PMID 32521345.
  69. ^ «Communities, Schools, Workplaces, & Events». Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. April 30, 2020. Retrieved July 14, 2020.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Chevallier, Jim (2018). A History of the Food of Paris: From Roast Mammoth to Steak Frites. Big City Food Biographies. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1442272828.
  • Fierro, Alfred (1996). Histoire et dictionnaire de Paris. Robert Laffont. ISBN 978-2221078624.
  • Gernet, Jacques (1962). Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250–1276. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0720-6.
  • Spang, Rebecca L. (2000), The Invention of the Restaurant. Harvard University Press
  • West, Stephen H. (1997). «Playing With Food: Performance, Food, and The Aesthetics of Artificiality in The Sung and Yuan». Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 57 (1): 67–106. doi:10.2307/2719361. JSTOR 2719361.
  • «Early Restaurants in America». UNLV Libraries Digital Collections. University of Nevada Las Vegas. Retrieved April 30, 2013.

Further reading[edit]

  • Appelbaum, Robert, Dishing It Out: In Search of the Restaurant Experience. (London: Reaktion, 2011).
  • Fleury, Hélène (2007), «L’Inde en miniature à Paris. Le décor des restaurants», Diasporas indiennes dans la ville. Hommes et migrations (Number 1268–1269, 2007): 168–73.
  • Haley, Andrew P. Turning the Tables: Restaurants and the Rise of the American Middle Class, 1880–1920. (University of North Carolina Press; 2011) 384 pp
  • Kiefer, Nicholas M. (August 2002). «Economics and the Origin of the Restaurant» (PDF). Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly. 43 (4): 5–7. doi:10.1177/0010880402434006. S2CID 220628566.
  • Lundberg, Donald E., The Hotel and Restaurant Business, Boston : Cahners Books, 1974. ISBN 0-8436-2044-7
  • Sitwell, William (2020). The Restaurant: A 2,000-Year History of Dining Out. New York, NY: Diversion Books. ISBN 978-1635766998.
  • Whitaker, Jan (2002), Tea at the Blue Lantern Inn: A Social History of the Tea Room Craze in America. St. Martin’s Press.

External links[edit]

Princeton’s WordNetRate this definition:3.0 / 1 vote

  1. restaurant, eating house, eating place, eaterynoun

    a building where people go to eat

WiktionaryRate this definition:4.0 / 2 votes

  1. restaurantnoun

    An eating establishment in which diners are served food at their tables.

  2. Etymology: From (a form of restaurer), from restaurans, present participle of restaurare, from restorative soup served in the first establishments.

WikipediaRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes

  1. Restaurant

    A restaurant is a business that prepares and serves food and drinks to customers. Meals are generally served and eaten on the premises, but many restaurants also offer take-out and food delivery services. Restaurants vary greatly in appearance and offerings, including a wide variety of cuisines and service models ranging from inexpensive fast-food restaurants and cafeterias to mid-priced family restaurants, to high-priced luxury establishments.

Webster DictionaryRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes

  1. Restaurantnoun

    an eating house

  2. Etymology: [F., fr. restaurer. See Restore.]

FreebaseRate this definition:4.0 / 9 votes

  1. Restaurant

    A restaurant is a business establishment which prepares and serves food and drink to customers in return for money, either paid before the meal, after the meal, or with a running tab. Meals are generally served and eaten on premises, but many restaurants also offer take-out and food delivery services. Restaurants vary greatly in appearance and offerings, including a wide variety of the main chef’s cuisines and service models.

Chambers 20th Century DictionaryRate this definition:1.5 / 2 votes

  1. Restaurant

    res′tō-rang, or res′tō-rant, n. a house for the sale of refreshments: an eating-house.—n. Restaurateur (res-tō′ra-tėr), the keeper of a restaurant. [Fr.,—restaurer, to restore.]

The Foolish Dictionary, by Gideon WurdzRate this definition:2.0 / 2 votes

  1. RESTAURANT

    An institution for the spread of dyspepsia. From Lat. _restauro_, to repair, and Grk. _anti_, against. After patronizing, you’re «up against repairs.»

Suggested ResourcesRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes

  1. restaurant

    The restaurant symbol — In this Symbols.com article you will learn about the meaning of the restaurant symbol and its characteristic.

British National Corpus

  1. Spoken Corpus Frequency

    Rank popularity for the word ‘restaurant’ in Spoken Corpus Frequency: #2876

  2. Written Corpus Frequency

    Rank popularity for the word ‘restaurant’ in Written Corpus Frequency: #3568

  3. Nouns Frequency

    Rank popularity for the word ‘restaurant’ in Nouns Frequency: #908

How to pronounce restaurant?

How to say restaurant in sign language?

Numerology

  1. Chaldean Numerology

    The numerical value of restaurant in Chaldean Numerology is: 6

  2. Pythagorean Numerology

    The numerical value of restaurant in Pythagorean Numerology is: 2

Examples of restaurant in a Sentence

  1. Robert Breinig:

    Last year, Martin County threatened to ruin our dream of owning and running a restaurant on our own piece of property, five hundred dollars a day would put me out of business in a week.

  2. Collin Laverty:

    From offloading at the airport to restaurant availability, infrastructure is maxed out.

  3. Stephen Vitale:

    It was a full restaurant, there were a lot of people.

  4. Ziv Cohen:

    We know that he couldn’t contain his behavior, even in a public place like a restaurant, when we shortly thereafter find her strangled to death, it does suggest a kind of intimate type of homicide, domestic abuse, type of homicide between a couple — and therefore certainly makes Brian Laundrie the main suspect.

  5. Mikail Ozen:

    After I carried the wounded woman to a nearby restaurant, the terrorist pointed his gun at me.

Popularity rank by frequency of use


Translations for restaurant

From our Multilingual Translation Dictionary

  • restaurantAfrikaans
  • مَطْعَم, مطعمArabic
  • restoranAzerbaijani
  • рэстаранBelarusian
  • ресторантBulgarian
  • রেস্তোরাঁ, রেস্টুরেন্টBengali
  • restaurantCatalan, Valencian
  • restauraceCzech
  • bwytyWelsh
  • restaurantDanish
  • Restaurant, GaststätteGerman
  • εστιατόριοGreek
  • restoracioEsperanto
  • restorán, restauranteSpanish
  • restoranEstonian
  • jatetxeBasque
  • رستورانPersian
  • ravintolaFinnish
  • vale ni kanaFijian
  • matstovaFaroese
  • restaurantFrench
  • bialannIrish
  • taigh-bìdhScottish Gaelic
  • restauranteGalician
  • ભોજનાલયGujarati
  • מסעדהHebrew
  • रेस्तरां, भोजनालयHindi
  • vendéglő, étteremHungarian
  • ռեստորանArmenian
  • restoran, [[rumah]] [[makan]]Indonesian
  • restorerioIdo
  • veitingastaður, matsölustaður, veitingasalur, veitingahúsIcelandic
  • ristoranteItalian
  • מִסעָדָהHebrew
  • 料理屋, 料理店, 食堂, レストランJapanese
  • რესტორანიGeorgian
  • мейрамхана, ресторанKazakh
  • ហាងបាយKhmer
  • ರೆಸ್ಟೋರೆಂಟ್Kannada
  • 음식점, 食堂, 레스토랑, 식당Korean
  • ресторанKyrgyz
  • cauponaLatin
  • ຮ້ານອາຫານLao
  • restoranasLithuanian
  • restorānsLatvian
  • ресторанMacedonian
  • റെസ്റ്റോറൻറ്‌, ലഘുഭക്ഷണശാലMalayalam
  • зоогойMongolian
  • restoran, kedai makan, rumah makanMalay
  • restorantMaltese
  • စားသောက်ဆိုင်Burmese
  • restaurantDutch
  • restaurantNorwegian
  • restauracjaPolish
  • خوړنځیPashto, Pushto
  • restaurantePortuguese
  • restaurantRomanian
  • ресторанRussian
  • здрављак, ресторан, gostiona, zdravljak, гостиона, gostionica, restoran, гостионицаSerbo-Croatian
  • අවන්හලSinhala, Sinhalese
  • reštauráciaSlovak
  • restavracijaSlovene
  • gjellëtore, restorantAlbanian
  • restaurangSwedish
  • உணவகம்Tamil
  • ఫలహారశాలTelugu
  • ресторанTajik
  • ภัตตาคาร, ร้านอาหารThai
  • restoranTurkmen
  • restawrantTagalog
  • lokanta, restoranTurkish
  • ресторанUkrainian
  • ریستوران, ریسٹورانٹUrdu
  • restoranUzbek
  • nhà ăn, nhà hàng, tiệm ăn, quán ănVietnamese
  • staudöpVolapük
  • רעסטאָראַןYiddish
  • 餐廳Chinese

Get even more translations for restaurant »

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Are we missing a good definition for restaurant? Don’t keep it to yourself…

a restaurant with a European flair — ресторан в европейском стиле  
a restaurant renowned for its wine list — ресторан, который славится своей картой вин  
buffet restaurant — ресторанчик, работающий по системе «шведский стол»  
decent restaurant — приличный ресторан  
to dine at a restaurant / out — обедать в ресторане  
fast-food restaurant — закусочная, ресторан быстрого обслуживания  
to manage / operate / run a restaurant — управлять рестораном  
to eat at a restaurant — обедать /ужинать/ в ресторане  
pricey restaurant — дорогой ресторан  
restaurant sugar — сахар для ресторанов  
seafood restaurant — ресторан с меню из морепродуктов  
organic restaurant — экологический ресторан  

I invited them to a restaurant.

Я пригласил их в ресторан.

That restaurant was a real find!

Тот ресторан был настоящей находкой!

We went to the restaurant by taxi.

Мы отправились в ресторан на такси.

We had dinner at a local restaurant.

Мы поужинали в местном ресторане.

He works as a cook in a local restaurant.

Он работает поваром в местном ресторане.

The restaurant opened earlier this month.

Ресторан открылся в начале этого месяца.

The restaurant hums on weekends.

По выходным в этом ресторане очень людно и шумно.

ещё 23 примера свернуть

We met in a tony restaurant uptown.

Wyatt glanced around the restaurant.

The restaurant serves dinner nightly.

Для того чтобы добавить вариант перевода, кликните по иконке , напротив примера.

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