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Client or customer? Which word is more suitable to define a person who eats in a restaurant? Client or customer?
26 sept. 2019 17:22
Réponses · 11
2
"Customer" is way better for this case! By saying "Client" you're showing that there is a deeper relationship between the restaurant and the person who visited. I hope it helps Aga!
26 septembre 2019
1
"Customer" is correct. Actually, I think "diner" is the most suitable word choice here, although "customer" is fine. "Client" is wrong. In the United States, "client" is used only in a professional relationship, and only for certain professions. Lawyers have clients. Accountants have clients. Social workers have clients. Oddly enough, though, the set of all of a business's customers can be called the business's "clientele."
27 septembre 2019
1
Customer is the right word. You provide products to a customer, and services to a client. A restaurant provides food, which is a product. Tim's comment is correct, that you might use 'client' as an exaggeration, or as a form of pretentiousness. In other words, a restaurant that thinks that the 'dining experience' they provide is more important than the actual food, could say that.
27 septembre 2019
1
Customer
26 septembre 2019
Definitely customer unless you were trying to be ironic or exaggerating the customer relationship to be more than it really was.
26 septembre 2019
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