Antonyms for catered
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : key-ter |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈkeɪ tər |
Definition of catered
Origin :- "provide food for," c.1600, from Middle English catour (n.) "buyer of provisions" (c.1400; late 13c. as a surname), a shortening of Anglo-French achatour "buyer" (Old North French acatour, Old French achatour, 13c., Modern French acheteur), from Old French achater "to buy," originally "to buy provisions," perhaps from Vulgar Latin *accaptare, from Latin ad- "to" + captare "to take, hold," frequentative of capere "to take" (see capable).
- Or else from Vulgar Latin *accapitare "to add to one's capital," with second element from verbal stem of Latin caput (genitive capitis); see capital (adj.). Figuratively from 1650s. Related: Catered; catering.
- verb provide, help
- No, sir, we have catered too long for the public not to know what its size is.
- Extract from : « One Day's Courtship » by Robert Barr
- But then, the uni-sexual Sirians, of course, often catered to their own feminine taste.
- Extract from : « Equation of Doom » by Gerald Vance
- The young gentry for whom he catered were not the “apples of his eyes” they had been.
- Extract from : « Follow My leader » by Talbot Baines Reed
- Have they not acted in public, laboured for the public, catered for the public?
- Extract from : « The History of "Punch" » by M. H. Spielmann
- Besides, she is a nuisance on the yacht if she must be catered to all the time.'
- Extract from : « Walter and the Wireless » by Sara Ware Bassett
- You said what you chose, and spoke from your own convictions, and catered to no one.
- Extract from : « Richard Carvel, Complete » by Winston Churchill
- Thereafter my trade was catered for by the best of manufacturers.
- Extract from : « Twenty Years of Hus'ling » by J. P. Johnston
- It was a privilege to be catered to by this master of his art.
- Extract from : « Old Times on the Upper Mississippi » by George Byron Merrick
- But the Elizabethan Dramatist was a man who catered to the Elizabethan play-goer.
- Extract from : « The Shakespearean Myth » by Appleton Morgan
- They have catered more for the intellect than for the heart and conscience.
- Extract from : « Notes on the Book of Deuteronomy, Volume II » by Charles Henry Mackintosh
Synonyms for catered
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019