English edit

Etymology edit

From waiter +‎ -ed.

Adjective edit

waitered (not comparable)

  1. Having a waiter or waiters.
    • 1974, The Michigan Journal, page 2:
      Self-service is used by many, but waitered service is nearly as common.
    • 1978 September 27, Leslie Land, “French pastry: A trip into a fantasy world for a child”, in The Capital Times, volume 123, number 90, Madison, Wis., page 64, column 1:
      Eating in Fancy Restaurants was one of the principal thrills of my childhood, when trips into a fantasy world of many-waitered service, lavish appointments and razzle-dazzle food were, though infrequent, far from rare.
    • 1988, Díosbóireachtaí Párlaiminte, page 2013, column 1:
      Regulation 7 (4) insists that all service must be waitered.
    • 2012, David A. Clark, Aaron T. Beck, “Courageously Facing Fear”, in The Anxiety and Worry Workbook: The Cognitive Behavioral Solution, New York, N.Y., London: The Guilford Press, →ISBN, page 141:
      [“Rank (least to most)”] 7. | [“Exposure task”] Eating at a table against the wall at a waitered restaurant | [“Anxiety rating (0–100)”] 75 / 8. | Eating at a table in the middle of the room in a waitered restaurant | 85

Verb edit

waitered

  1. simple past and past participle of waiter