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While I was flicking through English Vocabulary In Use, I came across this sentence 'Good night, sir. Have you reserved a table?'

To my knowledge,'Good night' expresses good wishes on parting at night or before going to bed.

Is this usage of 'Good night' acceptable in this context?

XPERT
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2 Answers2

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OED does indicate that “Good night” can be used as a greeting, but it’s unusual (and certainly in BrE, it would be unusual to the point of downright oddity):

  1. a. Expressing good wishes on parting (or occas. meeting) at night or before going to bed.

OED’s earliest citation for this meaning is from around 1496. It’s not obvious that any of its citations show usage on meeting, though.

  1. Chiefly Caribbean. Expressing good wishes on meeting during the evening. = Good evening int.

OED has citations from 1844 to 2009 for this usage as a greeting meaning “Good evening.” They have found evidence for it, as you have; but finding evidence is no indication of how general the usage is, in the Caribbean region or elsewhere.

Andrew Leach
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  • Bidding someone good night as a greeting would be equally odd here. It would confuse people. – tchrist Nov 24 '15 at 10:17
  • I have a vague recollection of having heard goodnight used as a greeting in Ireland, but I can't find any Irish reference in the OED. It would be interesting to know if anyone else recognises it as Irish. – WS2 Nov 24 '15 at 17:37
  • It is in general usage in Guyana. "Good night" is a greeting used at night, including when answering the phone. – Matt Samuel Nov 25 '15 at 04:11
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"Good evening, sir. Do you have a reservation?" is acceptable.

Saying "Good night, sir. Have you reserved a table?" is a lot like saying "Bonne nuit, monsieur. Avez-vous une réservation?"

Ricky
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