英:['vɪtlə]
美:['vɪtələ]
英:['vɪtlə]
美:['vɪtələ]
The first known use of victualler was in 1514
vicuñanoun
a wild cud-chewing animal of the Andes that is related to the llama and alpaca
the wool of the vicuña
victual1 of 2noun
food fit for humans
plural supplies of food : provisions
victual2 of 2verb
to supply with food
to store provisions
victual1 of 2noun
food fit for humans
plural supplies of food : provisions
victual2 of 2verb
to supply with food
to store provisions
victuallernoun
one that supplies provisions (as to an army or a ship)
victual1 of 2noun
food fit for humans
plural supplies of food : provisions
victual2 of 2verb
to supply with food
to store provisions
victuallernoun
one that supplies provisions (as to an army or a ship)
1 Neither we nor the ship’s crew have received any rations this day, there being some late dispute with the victualers.
2 You may as well call the place a “diner” and Stefanelli a “victualer.”
3 When the result of the election was announced, the successful candidate for representative bought out the remaining stock of the victualer, and invited his friends to help themselves, which they did with little ceremony.
4 The Ale Wives' Complaint Against the Coffee-houses, a dialogue between a victualer's wife and a coffee man, at difference about spiriting away each other's trade, also was issued in 1675.
5 I'm a licensed victualer and a gentleman—" "What do I want?
6 As surely as the wolf retires before cities, does the fairy sequester herself from the haunts of the licensed victualer.
7 I fancied it would be so delightful and Dickensy to talk quietly with a licensed victualer by the name of Martha Huggins.
8 It ran: "Paul Drayton, five feet eleven inches, brown hair and eyes, aged thirty, licensed victualer, born in London, convicted of robbery at the scene of a railway accident."
1 餐馆老板
2 食物供应者
3 食物补给船
4 粮食供给者
5 旅馆老板
6 饮食店主