English
Etymology
Via Middle English refectori from Late Latin refectorium, from Latin reficere (“to remake, to rebuild”).
Pronunciation
Noun
refectory (plural refectories)
- A dining hall, especially in an institution such as a college or monastery.
1964 April, “Letters: London stations—a consumers' guide”, in Modern Railways, page 274:They compare very well with similar cafes elsewhere and the quality, for example, is far better and the price cheaper than in my college refectory.
1973, Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow:With a clattering of chairs, upended shell cases, benches, and ottomans, Pirate's mob gather at the shores of the great refectory table, a southern island well across a tropic or two from chill Croydon.
Derived terms
Translations
dining-hall
- Arabic: please add this translation if you can
- Bulgarian: трапезария f (trapezarija), столова (bg) f (stolova)
- Catalan: refectori m, refetor m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 食堂 (zh) (shítáng), 餐廳 / 餐厅 (zh) (cāntīng)
- Danish: refektorium (da) n
- Dutch: refter (nl) m, eetzaal (nl) m, refectorium (nl) n
- Finnish: ruokala (fi), ruokasali (fi); (monastery) refektorio (fi)
- French: réfectoire (fr) m
- Galician: refectorio (gl) m
- German: Refektorium (de) n, Speisesaal (de) m, Mensa (de) f, Remter (de) m
- Greek: τραπεζαρία (el) f (trapezaría), τράπεζα (el) f (trápeza)
- Irish: proinnteach m
- Italian: refettorio (it) m, mensa (it) f
- Japanese: 食堂 (ja) (しょくどう, shokudō)
- Korean: 구내식당 (gunaesikdang), 식당 (ko) (sikdang)
- Latin: cenatio f, refectōrium n
- Macedonian: трпеза́рија f (trpezárija)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: refektorium n
- Nynorsk: refektorium n
- Plautdietsch: Ätstow f
- Polish: refektarz (pl) m
- Portuguese: refeitório (pt) m
- Russian: тра́пезная (ru) f (trápeznaja) (monastery), столо́вая (ru) f (stolóvaja) (college)
- Spanish: refectorio (es) m
- Swedish: refektorium (sv) n, klostermatsal (sv) c
- Turkish: yemekhane (tr)
- Welsh: ffreutur m
|