The Great Midday Meal Debate

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Waddya call your noontime meal?

It is lunch (followed by dinner)
8
29%
It is dinner (followed by tea)
15
54%
It is either
4
14%
It is neither
1
4%
 
Total votes: 28

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by TANGODANCER » Mon Dec 09, 2013 8:33 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:
TANGODANCER wrote:
seanworth wrote:
TANGODANCER wrote:Have to leave off reading for a bit now; wife's putting the tea out, she just told me. :wink:
Same here. Earl Grey I believe, served along with a cookie.
Nah, what's left of yesterday's beef and gravy with some chips and peas and a brew of .P.G Tips. :wink:
Somehow all served up as a hot beverage. Incredible. :conf:
Only to those who take dinner after getting home from work at teatime....perhaps. :wink:
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by bwfcdan94 » Tue Dec 10, 2013 10:16 am

People down here it is breakfast, lunch, dinner. In Bolton it is breakfast. dinner, tea (not supper) anyone want to protest. If you have supper then assuming you stick to having 3 meals a day then you have to "lose" either tea or dinner. breakfast supper dinner does not sound right nor does breakfast tea supper. I generally thought supper was a southern thing and just meant a brew and a biscuit before bed. I do know that supper has to be in the evening not in the afternoon.
Last edited by bwfcdan94 on Tue Dec 10, 2013 10:38 am, edited 1 time in total.
The above post is complete bollox/garbage/nonsense, please point this out to me at any and every occasion possible.

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Bruce Rioja » Tue Dec 10, 2013 10:33 am

bwfcdan94 wrote:People down here it is breakfast, lunch, dinner. In Bolton it is breakfast dinner, tea (not supper) anyone want to protest.
Yes me. This entire fecking thread is about the different names that people have for mealtimes. That's the fecking point of it. :roll:
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Dujon » Wed Dec 11, 2013 12:20 am

Down here we have, in order, breakfast - morning tea - X - afternoon tea - Y - supper. Anything between pairs is a snack.

X and Y I cannot say. The fact that we have morning and afternoon teas would indicate that the midday meal (X) should be called tea, but it isn't; it's pretty much universally labelled lunch(eon). After that it becomes somewhat murky. My wife for instance - Australian born of Australian parents (her maternal grandmother was English, from Eastbourne) - invariably calls Y tea. I on the other hand usually use the word dinner. In other words in our household the terms tea and dinner are interchangeable.

Then there is the problem as to what the word luncheon involves. In the world of the worker it normally means a meal consisting of a couple of sandwiches brought from home or, perhaps, a meat pie with tomato sauce bought from the local greasy joe. A weekend celebratory luncheon for friends or family, or a business luncheon can be a slap up meal. I'm just as confused as you are.

This discussion reminds be of, just a few years ago, a young lass working in her family take-away business drew me aside one evening to enquire as to when one says 'good evening' and when when says 'good night'. The family was Cambodian. This was the proverbial bolt out of the blue and threw my partly intoxicated brain into turmoil. My fuddled brain tells me that I answered something along the lines of: "If it's night time I would greet you with 'good evening' and, no matter how short our conversation, I would leave with the 'good night' salutation." I hope sincerely that I didn't deceive the young lady with gobbledegook.

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by General Mannerheim » Wed Dec 11, 2013 10:14 am

Dinner & tea with no consideration for southerners. Although I never have my tea before about half seven. Unfamiliar with these fiveoclockers...?

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by TANGODANCER » Wed Dec 11, 2013 11:34 am

It isn't just the Brits that have confusion, Dujon. In Spain "Buenos Dias" is generally good day, "Buenos Tardes" is effectively like our evening, all though it can be any time after mid-day and Buenos Noches good night. Then there's hasta la vista, ( till the sight of you) the more familiar Hasta pronto (see you soon) Hasta tarde (see you later) and the universal
"Adios" (chopped from Vaya con Dios-Go with God) is usually meaning goodbye but the locals greet each other with it in the morning when passing in the street.

"Good" tends to get dropped a lot and just "Morning" used, and afternoon and evening are pretty much replaced by a simple "hello". All of it is pretty much as you please. :wink:
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Montreal Wanderer » Wed Dec 11, 2013 4:05 pm

TANGODANCER wrote:It isn't just the Brits that have confusion, Dujon. In Spain "Buenos Dias" is generally good day, "Buenos Tardes" is effectively like our evening, all though it can be any time after mid-day and Buenos Noches good night. Then there's hasta la vista, ( till the sight of you) the more familiar Hasta pronto (see you soon) Hasta tarde (see you later) and the universal
"Adios" (chopped from Vaya con Dios-Go with God) is usually meaning goodbye but the locals greet each other with it in the morning when passing in the street.

"Good" tends to get dropped a lot and just "Morning" used, and afternoon and evening are pretty much replaced by a simple "hello". All of it is pretty much as you please. :wink:
What about Hasta luego? :wink:
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Athers » Wed Dec 11, 2013 4:11 pm

TANGODANCER wrote:It isn't just the Brits that have confusion, Dujon. In Spain "Buenos Dias" is generally good day, "Buenos Tardes" is effectively like our evening, all though it can be any time after mid-day and Buenos Noches good night. Then there's hasta la vista, ( till the sight of you) the more familiar Hasta pronto (see you soon) Hasta tarde (see you later) and the universal
"Adios" (chopped from Vaya con Dios-Go with God) is usually meaning goodbye but the locals greet each other with it in the morning when passing in the street.

"Good" tends to get dropped a lot and just "Morning" used, and afternoon and evening are pretty much replaced by a simple "hello". All of it is pretty much as you please. :wink:
I found in Colombia that while all three of dias, tardes (post 12) and noches are used, in an informal situation they just say 'buenos' - suppose it simplifies the issue for everyone.

Hasta luego I've always found more used and never hear hasta la vista
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by TANGODANCER » Wed Dec 11, 2013 5:09 pm

Hasta Luego (until later) is just another "until". It's more common than hata la vista, which is a bit formal and outdated, probably used when you don't know when you'll see each other again. If you're seeing someone tomorrow it could be hasta manana. Nos vemos is used amongst groups of friends (roughly, "we see each other" ) but wouldn't be used with comparative strangers. Hasta luego is probably the most useful. Hasta otra vez (until the next time) is another I've found most things in Spanish are best kept in the short form.
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by William the White » Wed Dec 11, 2013 7:28 pm

Athers wrote:
TANGODANCER wrote:It isn't just the Brits that have confusion, Dujon. In Spain "Buenos Dias" is generally good day, "Buenos Tardes" is effectively like our evening, all though it can be any time after mid-day and Buenos Noches good night. Then there's hasta la vista, ( till the sight of you) the more familiar Hasta pronto (see you soon) Hasta tarde (see you later) and the universal
"Adios" (chopped from Vaya con Dios-Go with God) is usually meaning goodbye but the locals greet each other with it in the morning when passing in the street.

"Good" tends to get dropped a lot and just "Morning" used, and afternoon and evening are pretty much replaced by a simple "hello". All of it is pretty much as you please. :wink:
I found in Colombia that while all three of dias, tardes (post 12) and noches are used, in an informal situation they just say 'buenos' - suppose it simplifies the issue for everyone.

Hasta luego I've always found more used and never hear hasta la vista
In spain as well... I've never heard dias, tardes or noches used alone. Buenos or buenas frequently. Though 'buenas tardes' in Spain probably wouldn't start until v late afternoon - or even nightfall...

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Bruce Rioja » Wed Dec 11, 2013 8:14 pm

And another thing. It's pud, or pudding, not dessert. And, whilst I'm on, they're called napkins, not fecking serviettes! Grrrrr.
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by thebish » Wed Dec 11, 2013 8:15 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:And another thing. It's pud, or pudding, not dessert. And, whilst I'm on, they're called napkins, not fecking serviettes! Grrrrr.

sorry - if you've given in to "lunch", you can't complain about serviettes and dessert... them's the rules! :wink:

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Bruce Rioja » Wed Dec 11, 2013 8:20 pm

thebish wrote:
Bruce Rioja wrote:And another thing. It's pud, or pudding, not dessert. And, whilst I'm on, they're called napkins, not fecking serviettes! Grrrrr.

sorry - if you've given in to "lunch", you can't complain about serviettes and dessert... them's the rules! :wink:
Can, and have. :D
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Athers » Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:24 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:And another thing. It's pud, or pudding, not dessert. And, whilst I'm on, they're called napkins, not fecking serviettes! Grrrrr.
"sweet"?
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Worthy4England » Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:31 pm

Afters, surely?

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by bobo the clown » Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:35 pm

Worthy4England wrote:Afters, surely?
That's the rascal.
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Bruce Rioja » Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:54 pm

Good grief. Sweet? Afters? Image
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Annoyed Grunt » Wed Dec 11, 2013 9:57 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:And another thing. It's pud, or pudding, not dessert. And, whilst I'm on, they're called napkins, not fecking serviettes! Grrrrr.
"Would you like to see the pudding menu?"

Never been asked that in a restaurant.......

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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Bruce Rioja » Wed Dec 11, 2013 10:02 pm

Annoyed Grunt wrote:
Bruce Rioja wrote:And another thing. It's pud, or pudding, not dessert. And, whilst I'm on, they're called napkins, not fecking serviettes! Grrrrr.
"Would you like to see the pudding menu?"

Never been asked that in a restaurant.......
That's because you eat in Benny and Harry's or whatever it's called and watch X Factory. ;)
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Re: The Great Midday Meal Debate

Post by Athers » Wed Dec 11, 2013 10:03 pm

Bruce Rioja wrote:Good grief. Sweet? Afters? Image
Haha, I'd never say it but the old man has been known to. Leigh, init
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