Verb Soup was served as the first course. The waiter served our meals quickly. The restaurant serves excellent Italian food. The waiter who served us was very nice. Feel free to serve yourself at the salad bar. You carve the turkey, and I'll serve. The roast should serve six. I'm afraid all of our salespeople are serving other customers right now. What can we do to serve our customers better? Noun She started the game with a powerful serve. See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Verb
The ridges are caused by daily tides and serve as a record of where ice touched the seabed in the past. Steven Koonin, WSJ, 19 Sep. 2022 Drexler was acquired to jumpstart an anemic offense and serve as a second option to focal point Olajuwon. Rahat Huq, Chron, 19 Sep. 2022 The couple will save their big, European honeymoon after the season wraps, as Cherry will serve as a choreographer behind the scenes to the pros. Lanae Brody, Peoplemag, 18 Sep. 2022 The gardens provide veterans, seniors and families in need with fresh produce, and also serve as a haven that nurtures community ties. Deanese Williams-harris, Chicago Tribune, 18 Sep. 2022 The Virginia Parole Board rejected his request on Aug. 30, finding that Malvo remains a risk to the community and should serve more of his sentence before being released on parole, state records of Parole Board decisions for August show. Denise Lavoie And Matthew Barakat, USA TODAY, 17 Sep. 2022 One has required the organization’s 374 member schools, which serve more than 215,000 participants in interscholastic sports, to report incidents of abuse. Bob Hohler, BostonGlobe.com, 17 Sep. 2022 Organizers urged participants to seek help from psychiatrists, psychologists, counselors or therapists for acute mental health issues, but also noted that informal gatherings can serve as therapy as well.San Diego Union-Tribune, 17 Sep. 2022 And Jenny Kiefer said real life can serve as inspiration for her treacherous tales. Rae Johnson, The Courier-Journal, 17 Sep. 2022
Noun
Mike Farah, Joe Farrell, Beth Belew, Whitney Hodack from Funny or Die serve as executive producers. Carson Burton, Variety, 1 Sep. 2022 Both players served and volleyed every point, first and second serve. Jason Gay, WSJ, 27 Aug. 2022 The mirrors on the inside serve as a periscope, aligning the camera's view with the back of the control panel. Jennifer Ouellette, Ars Technica, 3 Aug. 2022 Seating is first-come-first-serve; must show a valid ID in order to purchase an alcoholic beverage. Lauren Daley, BostonGlobe.com, 16 June 2022 Quick-serve restaurants — as they are known in the industry — also may have been vulnerable because managers are trained to cooperate with law enforcement, said Gene James, president of the National Food Service Security Council, an industry group. Andrew Wolfson, The Courier-Journal, 5 May 2022 While the screening is free and open to the public, registration is requested and tickets are per vehicle and first-come-first-serve. Arlyssa Becenti, The Arizona Republic, 2 May 2022 Doses will be administered on a first-come, first-serve basis. Anastasia Hufham, The Salt Lake Tribune, 19 Aug. 2022 And if those folks don't show up, the airline releases those seats on a first-come, first-serve basis. Peter Greenberg, CBS News, 18 Aug. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
Verb
Middle English serven, sarven "to perform a duty, be employed, assume the role of personal attendant, be of use (of a body part), perform religious rites, provide food and drink (to people at a table), deliver (a legal writ)," borrowed from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French servir, borrowed from Medieval Latin serviō, servīre, going back to Latin, "to perform duties for (a master) in the capacity of a slave, act in subservience, be at the service of," verbal derivative of servus "slave," perhaps, if the original sense was "watcher (of flocks), guardian," derivative with the nominal suffix *-u̯o-, of the Indo-European verbal base ser- "keep watch on, guard," whence, with varying ablaut and derivation, Greek (Homeric) epì…órontai "they kept watch over," Greek éphoros "watcher, overseer," phrourós "guard, watchman" (< *pro-horós), phrourā́ "guard duty," Avestan nišhauruuaiti "(s/he) keeps watch on" (from a stem *har-u̯a-), pasuš.hauruua "guarding the flock (of a dog)," harətar- "watcher, guardian"
Note: The above etymology of Latin servus "slave" is carefully argued by Helmut Rix (Die Termini der Unfreiheit in den Sprachen Alt-Italiens, Stuttgart, 1994, pp. 54-88), who rejects claims that the word is of Etruscan origin. Rix hypothesizes that between about 700 b.c. and 450 b.c., as most transhumant shepherds in the Italian peninsula came to be slaves, an agent noun meaning "flock guard" developed a secondary sense "slave," and by the time of the earliest Latin texts had largely lost its original meaning (with pāstor becoming the usual word for a shepherd—see pastor entry 1). The presumption is that Italic languages—as Indo-European languages generally—lacked a word for "slave," as slavery was an institution endemic to older Mediterranean and Middle Eastern civilizations. Note that Umbrian has a verb exemplified by the imperative seritu "(let him/her) protect!" that corresponds in form but not in sense to Latin servīre, which had been repurposed to reflect the new meaning of the noun *seru̯os. Rix hypothesizes that the Latin verb servāre "to watch over, look after" originally meant exclusively "to watch (the skies for an omen)," as a derivative of a noun *seru̯ā or *seru̯om "observation (of the skies)," and suggests that its senses expanded to cover those formerly held by the repurposed verb servīre.