Lunch ... or dinner? : Thu Nov 15, 2012 12:38 pm
When I was a little lad, dinner was what we ate around midday and lunch was something that was packed and carried, what we might call a packed lunch nowadays.
I can remember my mother saying, when I was going out for the day with the Cubs, that she would pack me a lunch for my dinner. The evening meal was always called teatime in our house. Quoting my mother again, I remember her describing our (Christmas-only) habit of delaying the main meal as "We're having our dinner at teatime". For working men, that packed meal could also be "snap" (often in a "snap tin") or "bait" (often in a "bait box"). This item from the BBC seems to back up the (generally) Northern habit of terming the midday meal as "dinner". http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20243692 What do you call it? |
When I was a little lad, dinner was what we ate around midday and lunch was something that was packed and carried, what we might call a packed lunch nowadays.
I can remember my mother saying, when I was going out for the day with the Cubs, that she would pack me a lunch for my dinner. The evening meal was always called teatime in our house. Quoting my mother again, I remember her describing our (Christmas-only) habit of delaying the main meal as "We're having our dinner at teatime". For working men, that packed meal could also be "snap" (often in a "snap tin") or "bait" (often in a "bait box"). This item from the BBC seems to back up the (generally) Northern habit of terming the midday meal as "dinner". http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20243692 What do you call it? |
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