verb, served, serv⋅ing, noun | 1. | to act as a servant. |
| 2. | to wait on table, as a waiter. |
| 3. | to offer or have a meal or refreshments available, as for patrons or guests: Come early, we're serving at six. |
| 4. | to offer or distribute a portion or portions of food or a beverage, as a host or hostess: It was her turn to serve at the faculty tea. |
| 5. | to render assistance; be of use; help. |
| 6. | to go through a term of service; do duty as a soldier, sailor, senator, juror, etc. |
| 7. | to have definite use: This cup will serve as a sugar bowl. |
| 8. | to answer the purpose: That will serve to explain my actions. |
| 9. | (in tennis, badminton, handball, etc.) to put the ball or shuttlecock in play with a stroke, swing, or hit. |
| 10. | to be favorable, suitable, or convenient, as weather or time. |
| 11. | Ecclesiastical. to act as a server. |
| 12. | to be in the service of; work for. |
| 13. | to be useful or of service to; help. |
| 14. | to go through (a term of service, imprisonment, etc.). |
| 15. | to render active service to (a sovereign, commander, etc.). |
| 16. | to render obedience or homage to (God, a sovereign, etc.). |
| 17. | to perform the duties of (a position, an office, etc.): to serve his mayoralty. |
| 18. | to answer the requirements of; suffice: This will serve our needs for the moment. |
| 19. | to contribute to; promote: to serve a cause. |
| 20. | to wait upon at table; act as a waiter or waitress to. |
| 21. | to carry and distribute (portions of food or drink) to a patron or a specific table, as a waiter or waitress. |
| 22. | to act as a host or hostess in offering (a person) a portion of food or drink: May I serve you with some tea and cake? |
| 23. | to act as a host or hostess in offering or distributing (a portion or portions of food or drink) to another: They served tea and cake to their guests. |
| 24. | to provide with a regular or continuous supply of something. |
| 25. | (in tennis, badminton, handball, etc.) to put (the ball or shuttlecock) in play. |
| 26. | to treat in a specified manner: That served him ill. |
| 27. | Law.
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| 28. | to gratify (desire, wants, needs, etc.). |
| 29. | (of a male animal) to mate with; service. |
| 30. | to operate or keep in action (a gun, artillery, etc.). |
| 31. | Nautical. to wrap (a rope) tightly with small stuff, keeping the turns as close together as possible. |
| 32. | the act, manner, or right of serving, as in tennis. |
| 33. | serve one right, to treat one as one deserves, esp. to punish justly: It will serve you right if she never speaks to you again. |

serve (sûrv) v. served, serv·ing, serves v. tr.
The right, manner, or act of serving in many court games. Phrasal Verb(s): serve up Baseball To pitch (a ball) over the middle of home plate, where it is likely to be hit hard. Idiom(s): serve (someone) rightTo be deserved under the circumstances: Punish him; it will serve him right for what he has done to you. [Middle English serven, from Old French servir, from Latin servīre, from servus, slave.] |
serve
In addition to the idioms beginning with serve, also see break someone's serve; first come, first served; hand to on a silver platter (serve up on a plate).