lunch room - meaning and definition. What is lunch room
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What (who) is lunch room - definition

FOOD SERVICE LOCATION IN WHICH THERE IS LITTLE OR NO WAITING STAFF TABLE SERVICE
Cafeterias; Lunchroom; Canteen (place); Dining hall; Lunch room; Chow hall; Catering unit; Works canteen; Champ's Cafe; Cafeteria-style restaurant; Cafeteria (structure); University cafeteria; School cafeteria
  • Hospital cafeteria tray line server in [[Port Charlotte, Florida]]
  • A student getting food from a school cafeteria
  • A corporate office's cafeteria in [[Bangalore]], [[India]], December 2003.
  • The main dining hall of [[Pensacola Christian College]]
  • Port Charlotte, Florida high school]]
  • Childs Restaurant, Philadelphia, PA, circa 1908
  • A cafetorium of [[St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy]] in [[Toronto]], [[Ontario]], [[Canada]].

lunch box         
  • Insulated [[thermal bag]] with [[ice pack]]s
  • Lunch boxes
FOOD CONTAINER
Lunch Box; Children's lunchbox; Lunch boxes; Lunch Boxes; Lunch pail; Lunch kit; Lunchpail; Lunch basket; Lunch-box; Lunch box; Lunchboxes
¦ noun
1. a container for a packed meal.
2. Brit. humorous a man's genitals.
lunch pail         
  • Insulated [[thermal bag]] with [[ice pack]]s
  • Lunch boxes
FOOD CONTAINER
Lunch Box; Children's lunchbox; Lunch boxes; Lunch Boxes; Lunch pail; Lunch kit; Lunchpail; Lunch basket; Lunch-box; Lunch box; Lunchboxes
N. Amer.
¦ noun a lunch box.
¦ adjective (lunch-pail) informal working-class; blue-collar.
lunch box         
  • Insulated [[thermal bag]] with [[ice pack]]s
  • Lunch boxes
FOOD CONTAINER
Lunch Box; Children's lunchbox; Lunch boxes; Lunch Boxes; Lunch pail; Lunch kit; Lunchpail; Lunch basket; Lunch-box; Lunch box; Lunchboxes
also lunchbox (lunch boxes)
A lunch box is a small container with a lid. You put food such as sandwiches in it to eat for lunch at work or at school.
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Cafeteria

A cafeteria, sometimes called a canteen outside the U.S. and Canada, is a type of food service location in which there is little or no waiting staff table service, whether a restaurant or within an institution such as a large office building or school; a school dining location is also referred to as a dining hall or lunchroom (in American English). Cafeterias are different from coffeehouses, although the English term came from the Spanish term cafetería, which carries the same meaning.

Instead of table service, there are food-serving counters/stalls or booths, either in a line or allowing arbitrary walking paths. Customers take the food that they desire as they walk along, placing it on a tray. In addition, there are often stations where customers order food, particularly items such as hamburgers or tacos which must be served hot and can be immediately prepared with little waiting. Alternatively, the patron is given a number and the item is brought to their table. For some food items and drinks, such as sodas, water, or the like, customers collect an empty container, pay at the check-out, and fill the container after the check-out. Free unlimited second servings are often allowed under this system. For legal purposes (and the consumption patterns of customers), this system is rarely, if at all, used for alcoholic drinks in the United States.

Customers are either charged a flat rate for admission (as in a buffet) or pay at the check-out for each item. Some self-service cafeterias charge by the weight of items on a patron's plate. In universities and colleges, some students pay for three meals a day by making a single large payment for the entire semester.

As cafeterias require few employees, they are often found within a larger institution, catering to the employees or clientele of that institution. For example, schools, colleges and their residence halls, department stores, hospitals, museums, places of worship, amusement parks, military bases, prisons, factories and office buildings often have cafeterias. Although some of such institutions self-operate their cafeterias, many outsource their cafeterias to a food service management company or lease space to independent businesses to operate food service facilities. The three largest food service management companies servicing institutions are Aramark, Compass Group, and Sodexo.

At one time, upscale cafeteria-style restaurants dominated the culture of the Southern United States, and to a lesser extent the Midwest. There were numerous prominent chains of them: Bickford's, Morrison's Cafeteria, Piccadilly Cafeteria, S&W Cafeteria, Apple House, Luby's, K&W, Britling, Wyatt's Cafeteria and Blue Boar among them. Currently, two Midwestern chains still exist, Sloppy Jo's Lunchroom and Manny's, which are both located in Illinois. There were also a number of smaller chains, usually located in and around a single city. These institutions, with the exception of K&W, went into a decline in the 1960s with the rise of fast food and were largely finished off in the 1980s by the rise of all-you-can-eat buffets and other casual dining establishments. A few chains—particularly Luby's and Piccadilly Cafeterias (which took over the Morrison's chain in 1998)—continue to fill some of the gap left by the decline of the older chains. Some of the smaller Midwestern chains, such as MCL Cafeterias centered on Indianapolis, are still in business.

Pronunciation examples for lunch room
1. the lunch room.
Fresh Off the Boat _ Hudson Yang _ Talks at Google
2. This is also our lunch room.
I'm Judging You _ Luvvie Ajayi _ Talks at Google
3. and I have said this publicly, the Google lunch room
Coffee Sapiens _ Chef Ferran Adrià _ Talks at Google
4. I'm not allowed to take pictures in the lunch room anymore.
ted-talks_1546_ClayShirky_2012G-320k
5. called their boardroom, which I think was more a lunch room.
Becoming Facebook _ Mike Hoefflinger _ Talks at Google
Examples of use of lunch room
1. He said it was too easy for children to walk out of the lunch room and into the school hallway to buy food and drink from vending machines.
2. Two weeks ago, students staged a sit–in at the lunch room of Pike Central High School in effort to get school officials to clean the school as protection against the bacteria.
3. Amy Wax, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania who worked in the solicitor general‘s office from 1'88–'4, said personal views didn‘t find their way into office paperwork. You might say it in the lunch room,‘‘ she said.