- high table
- noun Date: 1602 an elevated table in the dining room of a British college for use by the master and fellows and distinguished guests
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.
high table — ► NOUN Brit. ▪ a table in a dining hall at which high ranking people, such as the fellows of a college, sit … English terms dictionary
high table — n [singular, U] BrE the table where the most important people at a formal occasion sit = ↑head table … Dictionary of contemporary English
high table — n. [often H T ] Brit. the table, usually elevated, in the dining hall of a college or school where the head and important teachers and guests are seated … English World dictionary
High Table — At Oxford, Cambridge, and Durham colleges and other, more traditional, academic institutions High Table is a table for the use of fellows (members of the Senior Common Room) and their guests. The table is normally on a raised platform and at the… … Wikipedia
high table — noun a dining table in a dining hall raised on a platform; seats are reserved for distinguished persons • Hypernyms: ↑dining table, ↑board • Part Holonyms: ↑dining hall * * * ˌhigh ˈtable [high table] … Useful english dictionary
High Table, Lower Orders — is a BBC Radio 4 comedy drama murder mystery written by the late Mark Tavener and set in a fictional Cambridge college in crisis. The first series was broadcast in six episodes from February 18 2005, and the second series was broadcast April 7 –… … Wikipedia
high table — high′ ta ble n. brit. the table in the dining hall of a British college reserved for senior members and guests • Etymology: 1300–50 … From formal English to slang
high table — Brit. the table in the dining hall of a college, reserved for senior members of the college and distinguished guests. [1300 50; ME] * * * … Universalium
high table — noun Brit. a table in a dining hall at which important people, such as the fellows of a college, sit … English new terms dictionary
high table — noun (U) BrE the table where the most important people at a formal occasion sit … Longman dictionary of contemporary English