0 a piece of furniture with a flat top and cupboards at the bottom, usually used for holding glasses, plates, etc.
1 a piece of furniture with a flat top and enclosed shelves at the bottom, usually used for holding such things as glasses, plates, knives, and forks
Yet not everybody requires a settee and two chairs, nor a wardrobe, dressing-table and chest, nor a sideboard, table and four chairs.
My assistant made a telephone call, and a fan was on my sideboard within moments.
The advantage of heavy wine is that it is economic to buy and keep on the sideboard in a working man's house.
Would that mean putting in the bailiff and taking his bed and his sideboard?
Perhaps he—right down to his mutton-chop sideboards knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.
We have lived with port on the sideboard and bread in the larder.
There was always a photograph on some sideboard of the service man, however much he hated his service while doing it.
One picture, one sideboard and an antique carpet appear to have been lost.