refectory

Etymology

Via Middle English refectori from Late Latin refectorium, from Latin reficere (“to remake, to rebuild”).

noun

  1. A dining hall, especially in an institution such as a college or monastery.
    They compare very well with similar cafes elsewhere and the quality, for example, is far better and the price cheaper than in my college refectory. 1964 April, “Letters: London stations—a consumers' guide”, in Modern Railways, page 274
    With a clattering of chairs, upended shell cases, benches, and ottomans, Pirate's mob gather at the shores of the great refectory table, a southern island well across a tropic or two from chill Croydon. 1973, Thomas Pynchon, Gravity's Rainbow

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