Noun
a large room at a college or university; used especially for dining
Source: WordNetdining-hall
All CSUN dining locations — with the exception of the housing dining hall, Geronimo’s, and the student housing’s convenience store, Matador Mercado — will remain closed this fall. Source: Internet
As well as the academic content, trips are made to locales such as London, and the programme has a series of formal halls, which are described as "three-course candlelit meals" serving "interesting" fare in Pembroke's historic dining hall. Source: Internet
And that while she’s stuck in her room — for no good reason I can discern — a whole host of local bus drivers, contract workers and university employees, including dining hall service workers who’ve labored there for decades, are all out of jobs? Source: Internet
After the two of you unpack, suggest hitting up the dining hall. Source: Internet
Butler, like Rockefeller and Mathey, consisted of a collection of ordinary dorms (called the "New New Quad") before the addition of a dining hall made it a residential college. Source: Internet
After class, you could always find him in Lowell House, either in his tutor suite—a mess of papers and pizza boxes—or in the dining hall, where he sat for hours working with students. Source: Internet