Skip to main content

serving

/sur-ving/US // ˈsɜr vɪŋ //UK // (ˈsɜːvɪŋ) //

服务,服务的,服务于,服用

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the act of a person or thing that serves.
    • : a single portion of food or drink; helping.
    • : Electricity. a layer of material, as jute yarn or tape, that is applied to the core or the exterior of a lead-covered cable and acts as a protective covering.
adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : for use in distributing food to or at the table: a serving tray.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • Published in the journal Heart, the report also notes that the more you eat, the greater your risk, with each additional weekly serving of a half-cup of fried food increasing that risk by 3 percent.

  • Software such as Varnish Cache acts as a server-side cache to further speed up the generation and serving of a cached version of your page, making it as fast as possible with as few server calls as possible.

  • There are zero added sugars and only 110 calories per serving.

  • While its somewhat high fat content—four grams per serving—makes for denser baked goods, it’s still mostly carbohyrates.

  • The kids were asked how many servings of fruits and vegetables they ate each day.

  • The head banquet man at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in New York City started serving the concoction as a menu staple in 1938.

  • Veterans are a small minority of the population, as well, serving the greater whole.

  • If you need to store the bottle in the fridge, let it warm up for a few minutes on the counter before serving.

  • It invites dictatorial and rogue regimes to use Americans serving overseas as bargaining chips.

  • Brown had been serving a life sentence; McCollum had been on Death Row.

  • But, there is a beardless youth, follow'd by a cowardly serving man, who presses hard to see you.

  • It is cold, Mammy, said Jess to the Beldings old serving woman.

  • Thrse, now serving her guests, now one of them herself, is content; and contentment is better than joy.

  • This is a humorous allusion to a manner of serving up pikes which is well illustrated in the Fifteenth-Century Cookery-books, ed.

  • At the foot of the table the Norman men-at-arms were splashing their liquor, and roaring broad jests at the Greek serving-maids.