diner
diner — noun
1. a person who is having a meal, especially at a restaurant or other food-serving
a person who is having a meal, especially at a restaurant or other food-serving place
The diner at the next table complained that his steak was overcooked.
countable noun with definite article + prepositional phrase
Most diners leave a tip of around fifteen percent for good service.
Baraka noticed that every diner in the cafe seemed to be reading a newspaper.
A lone diner sat at the corner table, slowly working through a bowl of soup.
用法筆記
Often used in restaurant reviews or descriptions of dining settings. Commonly premodified by adjectives such as 'fellow', 'lone', 'hungry', or 'paying'.
常見錯誤
2. a small, inexpensive eating place, often with a long counter and booths, typical
a small, inexpensive eating place, often with a long counter and booths, typically found along roads or in small towns in the United States
Eleni and Jude stopped at a roadside diner for burgers and milkshakes.
roadside diner — typical location collocation
The diner on Maple Street serves huge plates of pancakes for just five dollars.
Mert's favorite all-night diner stays open twenty-four hours near the bus station.
That old diner still has a classic jukebox and red vinyl stools at the counter.
- café
more general; can range from simple to upscale
- eatery
informal and broad; not specific to any style
- greasy spoon
very informal, sometimes negative, suggesting low quality
用法筆記
Primarily used in American English. British English more commonly uses 'café' or 'caff' for a similar concept. The word often carries a nostalgic or retro connotation of mid-20th-century American culture.
常見錯誤
3. a carriage on a passenger train where meals are served to passengers during the
a carriage on a passenger train where meals are served to passengers during the journey
The train's diner had white tablecloths and fresh flowers on every table.
possessive: train's diner
Quan walked through three passenger cars to reach the diner for lunch.
The diner on this route is famous for its steak dinners and window views.
Passengers chose the diner so they could eat while watching the countryside.
- dining car
fully interchangeable; slightly more formal
- restaurant car
chiefly British term for the same thing
用法筆記
Exchangeable with 'dining car' in most contexts. This sense is the historical origin of sense 2 — many roadside diners were originally built from repurposed railroad dining cars.