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serves

 - 4 dictionary results

serve

[surv] verb, served, serv⋅ing, noun
–verb (used without object)
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.
–verb (used with object)
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.
a. to make legal delivery of (a process or writ).
b. to present (a person) with a writ.
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.
–noun
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.

Origin:
1125–75; ME serven < OF servir < L servīre, equiv. to serv(us) slave (cf. serf ) + -īre inf. suffix


serv⋅a⋅ble, serve⋅a⋅ble, adjective


1, 2. attend. 5. aid, succor.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Cite This Source Link To serves
serve   (sûrv)   
v.   served, serv·ing, serves

v.   tr.
    1. To work for.

    2. To be a servant to.

    3. To prepare and offer (food, for example): serve tea.

    4. To place food before (someone); wait on: served the guests a wonderful dinner.

    5. To provide goods and services for (customers): a hotel that has served tourists at the same location for 30 years.

    6. To supply (goods or services) to customers. See Usage Note at service.

    7. To meet the requirements of; suffice for: This will serve the purpose.

    8. To be of assistance to or promote the interests of; aid: "Both major parties today seek to serve the national interest" (John F. Kennedy).

    9. To work through or complete (a period of service): served four terms in Congress.

    10. To be in prison for (a period or term): served 10 years for armed robbery.

    11. To deliver or present (a writ or summons).

    12. To present such a writ to.

    1. To prepare and offer (food, for example): serve tea.

    2. To place food before (someone); wait on: served the guests a wonderful dinner.

    3. To provide goods and services for (customers): a hotel that has served tourists at the same location for 30 years.

    4. To supply (goods or services) to customers. See Usage Note at service.

    5. To meet the requirements of; suffice for: This will serve the purpose.

    6. To be of assistance to or promote the interests of; aid: "Both major parties today seek to serve the national interest" (John F. Kennedy).

    7. To work through or complete (a period of service): served four terms in Congress.

    8. To be in prison for (a period or term): served 10 years for armed robbery.

    9. To deliver or present (a writ or summons).

    10. To present such a writ to.

    1. To provide goods and services for (customers): a hotel that has served tourists at the same location for 30 years.

    2. To supply (goods or services) to customers. See Usage Note at service.

    3. To meet the requirements of; suffice for: This will serve the purpose.

    4. To be of assistance to or promote the interests of; aid: "Both major parties today seek to serve the national interest" (John F. Kennedy).

    5. To work through or complete (a period of service): served four terms in Congress.

    6. To be in prison for (a period or term): served 10 years for armed robbery.

    7. To deliver or present (a writ or summons).

    8. To present such a writ to.

  1. To assist the celebrant during (Mass).

    1. To meet the requirements of; suffice for: This will serve the purpose.

    2. To be of assistance to or promote the interests of; aid: "Both major parties today seek to serve the national interest" (John F. Kennedy).

    3. To work through or complete (a period of service): served four terms in Congress.

    4. To be in prison for (a period or term): served 10 years for armed robbery.

    5. To deliver or present (a writ or summons).

    6. To present such a writ to.

    1. To work through or complete (a period of service): served four terms in Congress.

    2. To be in prison for (a period or term): served 10 years for armed robbery.

    3. To deliver or present (a writ or summons).

    4. To present such a writ to.

  2. To fight or undergo military service for: served the country for five years in the navy.

  3. To give homage and obedience to: served God.

  4. To act toward (another) in a specified way: She has served me ill.

  5. To copulate with; service. Used of male animals.

  6. Law

    1. To deliver or present (a writ or summons).

    2. To present such a writ to.

  7. Sports To put (a ball or shuttlecock) in play, as in tennis, badminton, or jai alai.

  8. To bind or whip (a rope) with fine cord or wire.

v.   intr.
  1. To be employed as a servant.

  2. To do a term of duty: serve in the U.S. Air Force; serve on a jury.

  3. To act in a particular capacity: serve as a clerk.

  4. To be of service or use; function: Let this incident serve as a reminder to future generations.

  5. To meet requirements or needs; satisfy: a device that will serve well.

  6. To wait on tables: serve at luncheon.

  7. Sports To put a ball or shuttlecock into play, as in court games.

  8. To assist the celebrant during Mass.

n.   Sports
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.]
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

serve 
c.1175, "to render habitual obedience to," from O.Fr. servir "to serve," from L. servire "to serve," originally "be a slave," related to servus "slave," perhaps from an Etruscan word (cf. Etruscan proper names Servi, Serve). Meaning "to attend to (a customer)" is first recorded 1362; that of "to set food on (a table)" is from c.1386. Sporting sense, in tennis, badminton, etc., first recorded 1585; the noun in this sense is from 1688. To serve (someone) right "to treat as he deserves" is recorded from 1587. To serve the time "shape one's views to what is in favor" is from 1560, translating L. tempori servire; time-server first recorded 1584.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Legal Dictionary

Main Entry: serve
Function: transitive verb
Inflected Forms: served; serv·ing
1 : to deliver, publish, or execute (notice or process) as required by law served on the husband —National Law Journal>
2 : to make legal service upon (the person named in a process) : inform or notify by legal service served with prior notice of a defect —Gene Mustain>
3 : to put in (a term of imprisonment) served five years of her sentence>
Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law, © 1996 Merriam-Webster, Inc.
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