NOUN
- an area (as in a shopping mall) where fast food is sold (usually around a common eating area)
How To Use food court In A Sentence
- Food courts: everything from all-day breakfast bars to carveries and hog roasts. Telegraph.co.uk - Telegraph online, Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph
- There will also be mulled sherry and mince pies in the centre's food court.
- Whatever happened to walking in to your local arcade, sucking on a watered-down fountain beverage from the food court and challenging other local hoodlums to take down your high score?
- The reports in STOMP about these food courts and fast food restaurants would usually be followed up quickly by the relevant owners of these outlets, but we dont see such swift action when it comes to public facilities such as hawker centres and wet markets. nothing less can be expected of yabob to say. the pap govt will forever try to appear flawless. this has always been their way to fool people into thinking they are really great and continue to vote for them. (& their million $ salary) luckily in this age of internet, there are alternative source of news & discussion. no … … … … it's the rats 'fault!! SARA - Southeast Asian RSS Aggregator
- An added attraction is a food court offering quick eats representing the best of the East and the West.
- But the Food Court above the casino had a nice variety for a quick bite.
- Then if you are looking for such delicacies as wild boar pate, potted shrimps or simply a venison pasty, the Food Court should be your first stop.
- I think this kind of research is vital to understanding the food court as an imagined space of cosmopolitanism; as an encounter with the Other through bland, bain-marie fodder.
- Their energy - if not their enthusiasm for commerce - flagging, the group descended into the underground mall in search of the food court.
- Said to be modeled on a European food hall, the setup is closer to an American food court, with different stations for salads, "carvery" meats, sushi, whole fish, even pit barbecue and dumplings. NYT > Home Page