Wait | Mean of wait in English Dictionary
/ˈweɪt/
- Verb
- to stay in a place until an expected event happens, until someone arrives, until it is your turn to do something, etc.
- I hate waiting in long lines.
- They waited at the train station together.
- You should have waited a little longer. He showed up right after you left.
- I don't have time to wait around. If he's not here in five minutes, I'm leaving.
- She waited behind after class to talk to the professor.
- I'm sorry to have kept you waiting. How may I help you?
- I waited and waited but he never showed up.
- I'm waiting to use the bathroom.
- The taxi is waiting to bring us to the airport.
- Doctors are ready and waiting to give aid.
- She read the newspaper while waiting for the bus.
- Wait for me! I'll go with you.
- Take a seat and wait for your name to be called.
- It can take over an hour to be served at the restaurant, but the food is worth waiting for.
- to not do something until something else happens
- Wait! Don't start the engine yet.
- We waited for the sun to set before starting the fire.
- We'll wait until you come back to start the movie. [=we will not start the movie until you come back]
- You will have to wait your turn. [=you cannot do something until it is your turn]
- to remain in a state in which you expect or hope that something will happen soon
- I know she was happy when I lost my job. She was waiting to see me fail.
- I have waited for this opportunity for a long time.
- to remain in a state in which you expect to learn or find out something soon
- You will have to wait two weeks for the test results.
- She waited for his answer.
- We are waiting to hear back from the doctor.
- He'll be a star some day—just (you) wait. [=I feel sure that he will be a star some day]
- I have to wait and see whether or not I got the job.
- “What are you making?” “Wait and see.”
- to be done or dealt with at a later time
- The other issues will just have to wait until our next meeting.
- “Can this wait until tomorrow?” “No, it can't wait.”
- to be in a place ready to be dealt with, taken, etc.
- It's time to come inside. Dinner is waiting.
- There is a package waiting for you at home.
- She had several messages waiting for her at the office.
- to serve food or drinks as a waiter or waitress
- He waited at table for two years.
- to stay at home and wait for someone or something to arrive
- I can't go out. I've got to wait in for a delivery.
- to serve food or drinks as a waiter or waitress to (someone)
- The hostess waits on tables/people when the restaurant is crowded.
- to provide service to (a customer)
- He is busy waiting on customers at the moment.
- to act as a servant to (someone)
- He seems to expect his wife to wait on him.
- She waited on her children hand and foot. [=she acted like a servant to her children; she provided her children with everything they needed or wanted]
- to wait for (someone or something) to arrive or happen
- We waited on him, but he never came.
- The government's decision must wait on the committee's report. [=the government's decision will not be made until the committee has issued its report]
- to stay in one place until the end of (something)
- We waited out the storm in our hotel room.
- to delay going to bed while you wait for someone to arrive
- I'll be late; don't wait up (for me).
- to stop moving forward so that someone who is behind you can join you
- Hey, wait up (for me)! I'm going with you.
- Noun
- a period of time when you must wait
- There is never a wait at that restaurant.
- He had a long wait in line.
- The hostess said there would be a 45-minute wait before she could seat us.
- The dish takes a long time to prepare, but the results are worth the wait.
- to hide and wait for the right moment to make an attack
- The killer may have been lying in wait for him.
- No one knows what lies in wait for us in the coming year. [=no one knows what will happen to us in the coming year]