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Coke for breakfast
Message
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31/01/2007 05:56:50
 
 
Information générale
Forum:
Politics
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01188487
Message ID:
01190776
Vues:
15
>>>>>>>Interesting, in Wisconsin we referred to the evening meal as 'supper' but I've been in the South for so long that we call it 'dinner' now in my family. :o)
>>>>>>
>>>>>>For small town BC, and I think small town Canada it is
>>>>>>- breakfast, dinner, supper
>>>>>>For the city and young people it is
>>>>>>- breakfast, lunch, dinner
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>You hit the nail on the head. It's a rural/urban thing, not a north/south thing.
>>>>
>>>>Good morning Mike. I also think it is a young/old thing too.
>>>
>>>For me it's another one like the porridge/oatmeal thing. When I was a kid, we referred to breakfast, lunch and supper. Now I refer to breakfast, lunch and dinner. Again, I don't know why. Of course, if I'm going to be completely honest, it's really breakfast, brunch, lunch, afternoon snack, afternoon snack the sequel, dinner, after dinner snack, and before bed snack.
>>
>>After my kids saw Lord of the Rings, their cereal they call Breakfast, toast and/or Scotch pancakes they call "Second breakfast" :-)
>>
>>Lunch is midday
>>
>>When they get in from school, say up to 6:00 pm, they have "tea" (i.e. main meal)
>>
>>When I come home I call my meal "dinner"
>>
>>NOTE "Tea" cf "High Tea", which is the "traditional English 4:00 pm thing with tea (drink) and tabnabs (dainty sandwiches). BTW - we don't do it and everything DOESN'T STOP for tea.
>>
>>It seems then that where we differ from you colonials is in naming an afternoon/evening meal "tea"
>
>For sure we don't call any meal, or any other occasion, tea. The word itself is a radioactive reminder of the colonial past. Some of us drink tea on occasion but it's just something hot to drink.

I know and you all have to do a pilgrimage to Boston to spit it out into the sea. BTW, of all my beverages in a week it's always coffee - I maybe drink tea once a week, when I have a "bacon thirst" for instance; coffee just doesn't follow bacon or sausage, or fish & chips.
- Whoever said that women are the weaker sex never tried to wrest the bedclothes off one in the middle of the night
- Worry is the interest you pay, in advance, for a loan that you may never need to take out.
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