English does not have feminine or masculine nouns. In Spanish, it is feminine.
masculine
In general, cafeteria is not capitalized, unless it is part of a proper name; for example, Ruby's Cafeteria.
"Cafeteria" comes from Mexico (Reference : Webster's New World Collegiate Dictionary)
feminine
Ate is intransitive in that sentence. There is no direct object."You ate pizza in the cafeteria" is an example of ate as a transitive verb (pizza is the direct object).
masculine
i celebrated my birthday in cafeteria,sold foods in cafeteria,baked desserts in cafeteria.
PHS Cafeteria
The Cafeteria
a cafeteria. :)
Cafeteria in Chinese.
cafeteria - your spelling is correct.
cafeteria no no food
No, cafeteria is a concrete noun.
Yes, when it is used as a name of cafeteria. It should be -- Se nior Cafeteria
There are 5 syllables in cafeteria. (Ca-fe-ter-i-a)
After I go to the cafeteria.