Not supper then?Good morning @0lonerider
& to those yet to surface
RL today & a pub Tea ....
That's 'dinner' to the Aristocracy which in turn is the proper word for Lunch to the Hoi Polloi
Good morning @0lonerider
& to those yet to surface
RL today & a pub Tea ....
That's 'dinner' to the Aristocracy which in turn is the proper word for Lunch to the Hoi Polloi
Any meal eaten after tea would be supper!Well I do find use of terminology quite fascinating. When I was kid (very working-class background, council estate) we called the midday meal 'dinner'. That would be school dinners or if at home then fish fingers, beans and chips or tinned spaghetti on toast (!) etc. - a roast on Sunday. Then we had 'tea' at 5pm (maybe earlier?). Tea was just a snack really. A piece of cake or a bun or perhaps toast with a cup of tea. I think my Dad had something more substantial for tea as he took sandwiches to work. Then, before bed, we had supper: bread and dripping or bread and cheese if we were hungry.
Now, I call the midday meal 'lunch'. 'Tea' (if I ate it) would mean an English tea with sandwiches, scones, cakes and 'dinner' would be an evening meal usually eaten at 8pm. I have come across some rather upper-class people who call the evening meal 'supper' just to confuse things! I also know quite a lot of people who call their evening meal 'tea' but eat it at about 6pm as soon as they get home from work.
I have my dinner any time between 11:30 - 14:30 depending on work.Well I do find use of terminology quite fascinating. When I was kid (very working-class background, council estate) we called the midday meal 'dinner'. That would be school dinners or if at home then fish fingers, beans and chips or tinned spaghetti on toast (!) etc. - a roast on Sunday. Then we had 'tea' at 5pm (maybe earlier?). Tea was just a snack really. A piece of cake or a bun or perhaps toast with a cup of tea. I think my Dad had something more substantial for tea as he took sandwiches to work. Then, before bed, we had supper: bread and dripping or bread and cheese if we were hungry.
Now, I call the midday meal 'lunch'. 'Tea' (if I ate it) would mean an English tea with sandwiches, scones, cakes and 'dinner' would be an evening meal usually eaten at 8pm. I have come across some rather upper-class people who call the evening meal 'supper' just to confuse things! I also know quite a lot of people who call their evening meal 'tea' but eat it at about 6pm as soon as they get home from work.
You're almost as late as me there.Has @stephec told all of you that keith harris has died? Poor orville.lol
Welcome back SB, what have you been upto?Evening allAnyone doing anything exciting for Mayday?
I have my dinner any time between 11:30 - 14:30 depending on work.
Tea is anytime after 17:00, and anything after tea is just more food.