
28-Aug-2006, 14:37
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| Senior Member | | Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 671
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Re: what's the diferent between dinner and supper? Quote:
Originally Posted by DavyBCN There are also differences in the UK, partly regional and partly from social class and history. As a Welshman of working class roots I never used lunch until I was much older and living in England. The mid-day meal was always dinner. I think that lunch has now become the most common word throughout the UK. There were two meals later in the day - tea in the late afternoon, which was a light meal, and supper in mid/late evening, which was also a small meal. This was general over the whole of the UK, but changing social trends have almost extinguished these two meals, and now it is the norm just to talk about a snack, something to eat or a meal. Dinner is dying out rapidly as anything other than a formal evening meal, usually for when you eat out in a restaurant or invite friends to your home for a meal, when it is normally substantial and of at least 3 courses. | Well, I think it's even more unclear than that. I'm from the Midlands of England, and 'dinner' is, and always has been, the evening meal to me. In our region, "What are you having for tea?" and "What are you having for dinner?" are used almost interchangeably for the main evening meal by everyone - and it can be either a light or large meal. On Sunday, you have dinner at midday (which is a main meal), and 'tea' in the evening (which is a light meal). On every other day, you have 'lunch' at midday (which is a snack or light meal). Some people now say 'Sunday lunch' though, or they may have nothing at midday, and have 'Sunday dinner' in the evening.
My mother is Irish, and their main meal is either 'tea' (large) or 'supper' (light) in the evening, and 'lunch' at midday. They only use 'dinner' for a formal meal. |