I saw this –
I'm not convinced with the phrase 'bill presenter' (a person specially appointed to present a bill is also a 'bill presenter!'- just a tongue-in-cheek comment!) and looking for the better/proper term.
It's bigger than a normal wallet in my pocket but smaller than a menu.
Best Answer
I think it's first important to note for our ESL/EFL friends that one would practically never have a need to refer to one of these. (I personally don't ever recall hearing any name for this.) If one wants to ask for a bill in a restaurant, the answer is here: how should I ask for a bill in a restaurant politely.
This is the leather (or faux leather) folder that waiters/waitresses use to deliver the check/bill to the customer, who reviews the bill and encloses cash or a credit card back to the waiter. The following are terms used by several online restaurant supply distributors:1
Most people have never considered what this is called, but would likely use the following:
Here are a few Google Results:
"bill presenter"
189K results"guest+check+presenter"
86K results"check presenter"
31K resultsThis is similar to they way I sometimes describe the TV remote control to my wife late at night: "Darling, do you know where the channel changer is?" (Evidently I'm not alone on this with Google
"channel+changer" "remote+control"
at 14K results.)1. www.bigtray.com, www.usaequipmentdirect.com, www.centralrestaurant.com, www.zesco.com, www.foodservicewarehouse.com
2. AmE uses check or bill. BrE uses bill.