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Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names.
To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the morning meal breakfast. Just curious. -- I love a good meal! That's why I don't cook. |
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On Thursday, October 24, 2019 at 10:04:08 AM UTC-4, KenK wrote:
> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > morning meal breakfast. > > Just curious. It is regional. Where were you raised? <https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/different-regions-give-these-foods-different-names/> "Dinner" is the fourth one down. For me, the midday meal is always lunch. For the evening meal I use dinner and supper somewhat interchangeably, although I somewhat favor supper for a simple meal and dinner for a more complex or formal meal. I'm from Michigan. Cindy Hamilton |
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On 10/24/2019 10:26 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Thursday, October 24, 2019 at 10:04:08 AM UTC-4, KenK wrote: >> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >> >> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently >> some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the >> morning meal breakfast. >> >> Just curious. > > It is regional. Where were you raised? > > <https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/different-regions-give-these-foods-different-names/> > > "Dinner" is the fourth one down. > > For me, the midday meal is always lunch. For the evening meal I use dinner > and supper somewhat interchangeably, although I somewhat favor supper for > a simple meal and dinner for a more complex or formal meal. I'm from > Michigan. > > Cindy Hamilton > Lunch has always been lunch. Growing up we had supper but I find we use dinner more now. |
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On Thursday, October 24, 2019 at 9:04:08 AM UTC-5, KenK wrote:
> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > morning meal breakfast. > > Just curious. > > > > -- > I love a good meal! That's why I don't cook. Because you Break your Fast which you kept all night while asleep! BreakFast! :-) John Kuthe... |
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KenK wrote:
> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > morning meal breakfast. for me there is breakfast, brunch, nunch, lunch, and then dinner or supper which come later, snacks in between. i like the hobbits which admit to having 2nd breakfast. ![]() but personally i can't eat that many times. i usually eat some kind of breakfast if i can remember to do it and sometimes that is it until later on in the day when i will have supper. nothing however should be eaten after that because it is a good way to ruin your diet and put on weight. i hate if i get too hungry at night if i start in on snacking i may end up eating a whole 'nother meal. songbird |
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Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> On Thursday, October 24, 2019 at 10:04:08 AM UTC-4, KenK wrote: >> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >> >> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently >> some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the >> morning meal breakfast. >> >> Just curious. > > It is regional. Where were you raised? > ><https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/different-regions-give-these-foods-different-names/> > > "Dinner" is the fourth one down. > > For me, the midday meal is always lunch. For the evening meal I use dinner > and supper somewhat interchangeably, although I somewhat favor supper for > a simple meal and dinner for a more complex or formal meal. I'm from > Michigan. similar here except i don't consider complexity of the meal at all when using dinner/supper so those are pretty much interchangeable. i suspect the use of the word supper is more in line with religious affiliation too, but that is a hypothesis at this moment and a bit too busy to delve into it... i prefer to use the word dinner but am not 100% consis- tent. songbird |
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On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 10:51:18 -0400, Ed Pawlowski > wrote:
>On 10/24/2019 10:26 AM, Cindy Hamilton wrote: >> On Thursday, October 24, 2019 at 10:04:08 AM UTC-4, KenK wrote: >>> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >>> >>> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently >>> some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the >>> morning meal breakfast. >>> >>> Just curious. >> >> It is regional. Where were you raised? >> >> <https://www.tasteofhome.com/article/different-regions-give-these-foods-different-names/> >> >> "Dinner" is the fourth one down. >> >> For me, the midday meal is always lunch. For the evening meal I use dinner >> and supper somewhat interchangeably, although I somewhat favor supper for >> a simple meal and dinner for a more complex or formal meal. I'm from >> Michigan. >> >> Cindy Hamilton >> > >Lunch has always been lunch. Growing up we had supper but I find we use >dinner more now. Same here, except I didn't speak English growing up. |
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KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper.
Denise in NH |
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On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 14:04:03 +0000, KenK wrote:
> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls > the morning meal breakfast. > > Just curious. Growing up, dinner was an elaborate meal that took place in the afternoon after church, ie. Sunday Dinner. |
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On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT),
wrote: >KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd meal of the day "tea". |
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Bruce wrote:
> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), > wrote: > >> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. > > Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people > who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd > meal of the day "tea". > I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? |
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Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2019-10-24 4:15 p.m., wrote: >> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >> > Here is southern Ontario it has always been breakfast, lunch and > supper. A late weekend breakfast can be brunch, but it has to have > more than just plain old breakfast or lunch fare. > We'uns always called all our food vittles, regardless of the time. Yipee ... time fer vittles! |
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On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers >
wrote: >Bruce wrote: >> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >> wrote: >> >>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >> >> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >> meal of the day "tea". >> > >I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? That was Jebus. |
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KenK wrote:
> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > morning meal breakfast. > > Just curious. > > > I thought dinner and then supper was a Wisconsin thing. I was raised in the Chicago suburbs and it was always lunch and dinner. |
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On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 19:12:45 -0400, Alex wrote:
> KenK wrote: >> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >> >> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. >> Evidently some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems >> everyone calls the morning meal breakfast. >> >> Just curious. >> >> >> >> > I thought dinner and then supper was a Wisconsin thing. I was raised in > the Chicago suburbs and it was always lunch and dinner. The term dinner was only used for the large mid-afternoon meal on Sunday, usually centered around roast beef. Otherwise, they were breakfast, lunch and supper. I always thought the terminology was a Southern thing. In my case, Georgia. |
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On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 12:38:09 -0400, songbird >
wrote: >KenK wrote: > >> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >> >> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently >> some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the >> morning meal breakfast. > > for me there is breakfast, brunch, nunch, lunch, and then >dinner or supper which come later, snacks in between. > > i like the hobbits which admit to having 2nd breakfast. ![]() >but personally i can't eat that many times. i usually eat >some kind of breakfast if i can remember to do it and >sometimes that is it until later on in the day when i will >have supper. nothing however should be eaten after that >because it is a good way to ruin your diet and put on >weight. i hate if i get too hungry at night if i start in >on snacking i may end up eating a whole 'nother meal. > Oh yes second breakfast is very important. When you wake up at 4 am and break your fast at 430 you will start getting hungry again in the 8 o'clock hour, that can usually be put off til the latter part of 9 maybe even 10 at which point you can call it a brunch. then there is lunch at around 1 then dinner at 5-6 or if you are with the older generations it is most often called supper. To me though supper is more of a "supplement" meal hence the name supper. I feel that name has been more than not been pushed out for the more formal word of dinner from the term diner where most people take their evening means. That however does not count the snacks taken at the 9 - 11 o'clock hours. > > songbird -- ____/~~~sine qua non~~~\____ |
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![]() "KenK" > wrote in message ... > Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > morning meal breakfast. > > Just curious. Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then last meal supper. |
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On 10/24/2019 11:29 PM, Julie Bove wrote:
> > "KenK" > wrote in message > ... >> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >> >> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently >> some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls >> the >> morning meal breakfast. >> >> Just curious. > > Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then > last meal supper. So did Jesus |
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"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers > wrote: >Bruce wrote: >> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >> wrote: >> >>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >> >> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >> meal of the day "tea". >> > >I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? That was Jebus. === A bogon?? |
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"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), wrote: >KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd meal of the day "tea". === When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and supper! Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It went then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() |
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"Julie Bove" wrote in message ...
"KenK" > wrote in message ... > Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > morning meal breakfast. > > Just curious. Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then last meal supper. === Supper for us when I was a child was a cup of cocoa and a biscuit ![]() not a US biscuit <g> |
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On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 10:36:32 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote:
> "Julie Bove" wrote in message ... > > > "KenK" > wrote in message > ... > > Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls the > > morning meal breakfast. > > > > Just curious. > > Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then last > meal supper. > > === > > Supper for us when I was a child was a cup of cocoa and a biscuit ![]() > not a US biscuit <g> More of a snack. I presume tea was a more substantial meal? Or was the main meal of the day the midday dinner? Cindy Hamilton |
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"Cindy Hamilton" wrote in message
... On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 10:36:32 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote: > "Julie Bove" wrote in message ... > > > "KenK" > wrote in message > ... > > Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls > > the > > morning meal breakfast. > > > > Just curious. > > Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then > last > meal supper. > > === > > Supper for us when I was a child was a cup of cocoa and a biscuit ![]() > No, > not a US biscuit <g> More of a snack. I presume tea was a more substantial meal? Or was the main meal of the day the midday dinner? Cindy Hamilton ==== Dinner was the mail meal of the day. Tea was mostly, sandwiches and cakes ![]() |
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On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 11:26:35 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote:
> "Cindy Hamilton" wrote in message > ... > > On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 10:36:32 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote: > > "Julie Bove" wrote in message ... > > > > > > "KenK" > wrote in message > > ... > > > Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > > > > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. Evidently > > > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls > > > the > > > morning meal breakfast. > > > > > > Just curious. > > > > Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then > > last > > meal supper. > > > > === > > > > Supper for us when I was a child was a cup of cocoa and a biscuit ![]() > > No, > > not a US biscuit <g> > > More of a snack. I presume tea was a more substantial meal? Or was the > main meal of the day the midday dinner? > > Cindy Hamilton > > ==== > > Dinner was the mail meal of the day. Tea was mostly, sandwiches and > cakes ![]() The evening meal became the main meal of the day when workers could not get home at midday. That certainly was the case when I was a child; the adults in the house worked far from home and had a sandwich or something at midday, then a full meal in the evening. Cindy Hamilton |
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"Cindy Hamilton" wrote in message
... On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 11:26:35 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote: > "Cindy Hamilton" wrote in message > ... > > On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 10:36:32 AM UTC-4, Ophelia wrote: > > "Julie Bove" wrote in message ... > > > > > > "KenK" > wrote in message > > ... > > > Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. > > > > > > To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. > > > Evidently > > > some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems everyone calls > > > the > > > morning meal breakfast. > > > > > > Just curious. > > > > Breakfast, lunch and dinner. When I lived in Wichita, they called then > > last > > meal supper. > > > > === > > > > Supper for us when I was a child was a cup of cocoa and a biscuit ![]() > > No, > > not a US biscuit <g> > > More of a snack. I presume tea was a more substantial meal? Or was the > main meal of the day the midday dinner? > > Cindy Hamilton > > ==== > > Dinner was the mail meal of the day. Tea was mostly, sandwiches and > cakes ![]() The evening meal became the main meal of the day when workers could not get home at midday. That certainly was the case when I was a child; the adults in the house worked far from home and had a sandwich or something at midday, then a full meal in the evening. === In my childhood, most people worked locally and were always home at 'dinner time' for their dinner ![]() |
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On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:33:11 +0100, "Ophelia"
> wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message ... > >On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers > >wrote: > >>Bruce wrote: >>> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>> wrote: >>> >>>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >>> >>> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>> meal of the day "tea". >>> >> >>I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? > >That was Jebus. > >=== > A bogon?? Bogan. <https://www.australiantimes.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/chris-franklin.jpg> Beer, tattoos, flip-flops and a severe Australian accent. Oh and an Asian mail order wife after middle age. |
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On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:34:31 +0100, "Ophelia"
> wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message ... > >On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >wrote: > >>KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. > >Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >meal of the day "tea". > >=== > > When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and >supper! > > Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It went >then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. > > These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() Your "tea" probably actually included tea ![]() |
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"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:33:11 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message .. . > >On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers > >wrote: > >>Bruce wrote: >>> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>> wrote: >>> >>>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >>> >>> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>> meal of the day "tea". >>> >> >>I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? > >That was Jebus. > >=== > A bogon?? Bogan. <https://www.australiantimes.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/chris-franklin.jpg> Beer, tattoos, flip-flops and a severe Australian accent. Oh and an Asian mail order wife after middle age. == Good grief! Can I take it that some folk don't like Australians??? That is mean! |
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"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:34:31 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message .. . > >On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >wrote: > >>KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. > >Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >meal of the day "tea". > >=== > > When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and >supper! > > Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It went >then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. > > These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() Your "tea" probably actually included tea ![]() === LOL it most certainly did in those days ![]() time I drank tea ![]() |
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On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 20:35:13 +0100, "Ophelia"
> wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message ... > >On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:33:11 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: > >>"Bruce" wrote in message . .. >> >>On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers > >>wrote: >> >>>Bruce wrote: >>>> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>>> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >>>> >>>> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>>> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>>> meal of the day "tea". >>>> >>> >>>I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? >> >>That was Jebus. >> >>=== >> A bogon?? > >Bogan. > ><https://www.australiantimes.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/chris-franklin.jpg> > >Beer, tattoos, flip-flops and a severe Australian accent. Oh and an >Asian mail order wife after middle age. > >== > > Good grief! Can I take it that some folk don't like Australians??? That >is mean! LOL They're not necessarily bad people, just an acquired taste ![]() |
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On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 9:36:09 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
> "Bruce" wrote in message ... > > On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:34:31 +0100, "Ophelia" > > wrote: > > >"Bruce" wrote in message > .. . > > > >On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), > >wrote: > > > >>KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. > >>Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. > > > >Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people > >who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd > >meal of the day "tea". > > > >=== > > > > When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and > >supper! > > > > Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It went > >then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. > > > > These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() > > Your "tea" probably actually included tea ![]() > > === > > LOL it most certainly did in those days ![]() > time I drank tea ![]() Surely you jest. ![]() |
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"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 20:35:13 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message .. . > >On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:33:11 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: > >>"Bruce" wrote in message . .. >> >>On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers > >>wrote: >> >>>Bruce wrote: >>>> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>>> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >>>> >>>> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>>> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>>> meal of the day "tea". >>>> >>> >>>I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? >> >>That was Jebus. >> >>=== >> A bogon?? > >Bogan. > ><https://www.australiantimes.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/chris-franklin.jpg> > >Beer, tattoos, flip-flops and a severe Australian accent. Oh and an >Asian mail order wife after middle age. > >== > > Good grief! Can I take it that some folk don't like Australians??? > That >is mean! LOL They're not necessarily bad people, just an acquired taste ![]() === LOL |
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"Bruce" wrote in message ...
On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 20:35:59 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message .. . > >On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:34:31 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: > >>"Bruce" wrote in message . .. >> >>On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>wrote: >> >>>KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >> >>Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>meal of the day "tea". >> >>=== >> >> When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and >>supper! >> >> Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It >> went >>then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. >> >> These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() > >Your "tea" probably actually included tea ![]() > >=== > > LOL it most certainly did in those days ![]() >time I drank tea ![]() I've pretty much given up on it too. I don't hate it, but I don't see the attraction. === When did you last drink it ![]() |
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"dsi1" wrote in message
... On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 9:36:09 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote: > "Bruce" wrote in message > ... > > On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:34:31 +0100, "Ophelia" > > wrote: > > >"Bruce" wrote in message > .. . > > > >On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), > >wrote: > > > >>KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. > >>Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. > > > >Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people > >who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd > >meal of the day "tea". > > > >=== > > > > When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and > >supper! > > > > Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It > > went > >then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. > > > > These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() > > Your "tea" probably actually included tea ![]() > > === > > LOL it most certainly did in those days ![]() > time I drank tea ![]() Surely you jest. ![]() === Absolutely not ![]() ![]() |
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On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 20:57:47 +0100, "Ophelia"
> wrote: >"Bruce" wrote in message ... > >On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 20:35:59 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: > >>"Bruce" wrote in message . .. >> >>On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:34:31 +0100, "Ophelia" > wrote: >> >>>"Bruce" wrote in message ... >>> >>>On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>>wrote: >>> >>>>KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>>Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >>> >>>Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>>who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>>meal of the day "tea". >>> >>>=== >>> >>> When I was a child in Yorkshire, it was breakfast, dinner, tea and >>>supper! >>> >>> Everything changes as I moved to different parts of the world. It >>> went >>>then to breakfast, lunch and dinner. >>> >>> These days, it is whatever we want it to be, whenever we want it ![]() >> >>Your "tea" probably actually included tea ![]() >> >>=== >> >> LOL it most certainly did in those days ![]() >>time I drank tea ![]() > >I've pretty much given up on it too. I don't hate it, but I don't see >the attraction. > >=== > > When did you last drink it ![]() I can't remember. I think years ago. |
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On Friday, October 25, 2019 at 9:58:31 AM UTC-10, Ophelia wrote:
> > Absolutely not ![]() ![]() I watch a lot of Brit tv and it always goes down like this: Police: Mrs. Lewis, we regretfully have to inform you that your husband, Mr. Lewis was set upon by a tribe of wild pygmies with blow darts on the I-45 this morning and we don't think he's going to make it. He looked like a porcupine when we found him. Mrs. Lewis: I'll go put the kettle on. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1vZ-Rt61RKg |
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On 10/24/2019 8:30 PM, nemo wrote:
> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 19:12:45 -0400, Alex wrote: > >> KenK wrote: >>> Meals that is. I was raised in Chicago where I got my meal names. >>> >>> To me the noon meal is 'dinner' and the evening meal 'supper'. >>> Evidently some use 'lunch' and 'dinner'. Maybe other names. Seems >>> everyone calls the morning meal breakfast. >>> >>> Just curious. >>> >>> >>> >>> >> I thought dinner and then supper was a Wisconsin thing. I was raised in >> the Chicago suburbs and it was always lunch and dinner. > > The term dinner was only used for the large mid-afternoon meal on Sunday, > usually centered around roast beef. Otherwise, they were breakfast, lunch > and supper. I always thought the terminology was a Southern thing. In my > case, Georgia. > I lived in lots of places all over the US growing up. It was always breakfast, lunch and dinner. I've heard "supper" but no one in my family ever used that term for the evening meal. Living in the south for going on 40 years, I never once heard anyone call the mid-day meal supper, either. Only on television. YMMV. ![]() Jill |
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Bruce wrote:
> On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 20:35:13 +0100, "Ophelia" > > wrote: > >> "Bruce" wrote in message ... >> >> On Fri, 25 Oct 2019 15:33:11 +0100, "Ophelia" >> > wrote: >> >>> "Bruce" wrote in message >>> ... >>> >>> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 16:50:36 -0500, Hank Rogers > >>> wrote: >>> >>>> Bruce wrote: >>>>> On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 13:15:43 -0700 (PDT), >>>>> wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> KenK, growing up in New Hampshire, it was breakfast, dinner, supper. >>>>>> Somewhere across the years, it changed to breakfast, lunch, supper. >>>>> >>>>> Import Australian: breakfast, lunch, dinner. "Supper" is for people >>>>> who talk funny. Lower socio-economic Australians often call the 3rd >>>>> meal of the day "tea". >>>>> >>>> >>>> I believe you. After all, yoose a bogan ain't yoose? >>> >>> That was Jebus. >>> >>> === >>> A bogon?? >> >> Bogan. >> >> <https://www.australiantimes.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/chris-franklin.jpg> >> >> Beer, tattoos, flip-flops and a severe Australian accent. Oh and an >> Asian mail order wife after middle age. >> >> == >> >> Good grief! Can I take it that some folk don't like Australians??? That >> is mean! > > LOL They're not necessarily bad people, just an acquired taste ![]() > I've known quite a few australians and they were all nice folks. But like any group, there are always a few complete assholes. To wit: If you are looking for a 100% complete ****ing asshole in australia , druce is your man. In the US, no need to look farther than new york. Ask for Popeye. In the midwest, there is a psychotic in da lou, but he may not fill the role of complete asshole like the above walking sphincters. On da rock, there is an Asian racist you might enjoy talking to, roundeyes. |
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