There is also a famous old coaching house, the Ship Hotel (most curiously named), which caters particularly for automobilists.
The Princess received Madame de Caters and myself with a gracefulness which was increased by her unusual bashfulness.
She was very fond of Baroness de Caters and that was the secret of the reception which put me at my ease at once.
The tourist industry is aimed at the luxury market and caters mainly to visitors from North America.
A small light industry sector caters to the local market.
He caters to the needs of the elite by cozying up to the West and, in particular, to America - even as he provides the lower classes with a sense of direction and security they lacked since 1985.
A private cemetery in Samara caters to the needs of the expired newly rich.
But its news is comparatively poor, owing to its being only a single-sheet paper, and it caters for a far inferior class than the Argus.
In Sydney, the Herald proprietors publish the Echo, a sprightly little sheet; but the best evening paper is the Evening News, which caters for the popular taste and is somewhat sensational.
One class of Get-Rich-Quick operator uses crude methods, has little standing in the community, operates with comparatively small capital, and caters to those who do not think and have only small resources.
But for the gambling instinct and the promoter who catersto it, the treasure-stores of Nature might remain undisturbed and fallow and the world's development forces lie limp and impotent.
Maybe you think, dear reader, that a man who caters to the gambling instinct of his fellow men, be his intentions honest or dishonest, is a highly immoral person.
Since the want to which a costly ornament caters is thus elastic, the cheapening of all articles that cater to this want would enlarge the consumption of all of them.
He caters to the ultra-extravagant, who do not care what they pay.
The place has seen many notable dinners, harboured many illustrious personages, and its ancient grandeur clings about it like a garment, though it caters now to the most mixed and modern of fashionable crowds.
One is always an artist, but one caters to the individual.
And He that doth the ravens feed, Yea, providently caters for the sparrow, Be comfort to my age!
It is successful as a place of business, because it caters to primitive wants and social interests in considerable variety.
Multiplicity of other interests overshadows the ecclesiastical interests of the aristocracy; fatigue and hostility to an institution that they think caters to the rich keeps the proletariat at home.
To the children, again, the mother caters under direct pressure of personal affection.
When art caters to private tastes, to domestic tastes, to the wholly private and domestic tastes of women, art goes down.
He that doth the ravens feed Yea, providentlycaters for the sparrow, Be comfort to my age!
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "caters" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.