| 释义 | 
		Definition of dhaba in English: dhabanoun ˈdɑːbə Indian A roadside food stall. 〈印度〉路边饮食摊 Example sentencesExamples -  I take delight in the flaming stoves and gleaming brass vessels in wayside dhabas.
 -  Along with my friends, I've gone to almost all the dhabas on the outskirts of the town.
 -  A vigilant police constable picked up a four-year-old who was washing dishes in a Delhi dhaba.
 -  On the non-fuel side, these outlets would have dormitory accommodation, restaurants for motorists, dhabas for truckers, rest rooms, STD / Fax facilities.
 -  All shops, even dhabas and chemist shops, remained closed.
 -  Full houseboats and hotels, jam-packed restaurants and dhabas and a ubiquitous traffic jam even at nine at night suggest that Kashmir has not lost its glory.
 -  Truckers frequent the dhaba often - both for meals and for girls.
 -  Will the business of Le Meridien be affected if a dhaba is opened near it?
 -  For tourists and the locals, there's the ubiquitous dhaba - that hole-in-the-wall eatery that dishes up the most flavoursome and fragrant of food at the humblest of prices.
 -  They will raise a stink about local dhabas going out of business due to competition from Nestle shacks, and earn ‘Pro-Poor’ labels.
 -  The drive has been undertaken to ensure that domestic LPG cylinders are not used in hotels, restaurants, dhabas, sweet shops, tea stalls and other business establishments.
 -  Right from childhood, he has spent his time either at the dining hall or at the dhaba nearby.
 -  The mouth-watering rotis offered by a roadside dhaba are the most delicious ones I have ever had in South India.
 -  She operates from roadside dhabas along the State highway.
 -  For gourmets, there are 20 dhabas offering authentic north Indian, Chinese and some of the traditional south Indian dishes.
 -  People discuss politics in buses and trains and dhabas and in their homes, and are deeply involved in the equations of power: who wields it, who will wield it, who once wielded it, who may wield it, and who can never wield it.
 -  Not surprisingly, Manjuben is taken to be a man by almost all truck drivers and dhabas that she visits.
 -  Keiichi leads a very simple life on his travels, sleeping overnight in roadside dhabas and getting his food mostly from people he meets.
 -  Back in college, we read Kolatkar in dhabas and cafes the way I imagine another generation elsewhere must have read Lorca and Neruda.
 -  The village down the road is a study in contrast - mud roads, garbage heaps, clogged drains and shanty dhabas are the high points of a walk through Shikaripalaya.
 
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