Some people in Britain and Australia refer to their main evening meal as "tea" rather than "dinner" or "supper", but generally, with the exception of Scotland and Northern England, "tea" refers to a light meal or a snack.
Breakfast - between 7:00 and 9:00, Lunch - between 12:00 and 1:30 p.m. Dinner (sometimes called Supper) - The main meal. Eaten anytime between 6:30 and 8:00 p.m. (Evening meal)
According to the majority of British adults (54 percent), the last meal of the day should be called 'dinner'. In fact, only four in ten Britons still refer to it as "tea", while just one in twenty (5 percent) call it 'supper'.
Some call it dinner, others refer to it as tea, and then there's the word supper – which a recent survey has revealed will apparently make you 'posh' for using.
The terminology around eating in the UK is still confusing. For some "lunch" is "dinner" and vice versa. From the Roman times to the Middle Ages everyone ate in the middle of the day, but it was called dinner and was the main meal of the day. Lunch as we know it didn't exist - not even the word.
Why do British people refer to lunch as dinner? Because dinner is dinner followed by tea and supper. Dinner is the main meal of the day what ever time it is served. So if your main meal is at lunch time then that's dinner.
These days, class boundaries are increasingly blurred so anybody may use either term depending on how they've been brought up or where they live. However, both tea and dinner essentially mean the same thing to most Brits: an evening meal.
If the meal you eat in the middle of the day is your main meal then it can be called either lunch or dinner. There is a tradition among some Australians to have a large family meal at lunch time on Sunday. It is often called Sunday dinner.
Depends what part of the British Isles you live in. The English call their midday meal Lunch, and their evening meal Dinner, but in Scotland we call our midday meal Dinner, and evening meal in Scotland is called Tea.
It's usage has nothing to do with being lower class for I attended a private school and was taught that the three meals of the day were breakfast, lunch and dinner and there were two snacks known as morning and afternoon tea. So that's the usage of the word in Brisbane.
Breakfast: This is also called brekkie by some but not common. Breakfast is usually the same everywhere though the contents of breakfast will vary hugely. Both Britain and Ireland are famous for their cooked breakfast which is known as "full" or "cooked" breakfast.
repast. He proclaimed it a splendid repast. blowout (slang) collation. nosh-up (informal)
banquet. noun. a formal meal prepared for a large number of people on an important occasion.
Supper is a significantly more popular term in the south. At least 10% of people living in Essex, Gloucestershire, East Anglia, South Wales, Oxfordshire, Devon and East Sussex say supper instead of dinner or tea. Edinburgh was the only place outside of the south of England that did the same.
However, in Australia, dinner would be referred to as the main evening meal, and supper would be snacks and food eaten later in the evening; which the US citizens would call a late night snack.
Let's dig in (or 'dig in') Enjoy your meal (or 'enjoy') Hope you enjoy what we've made for you. Bon appetit.
They found that 74 per cent of Scots surveyed call their evening meal dinner. Only 19 per cent think it should be called tea while six per cent said it should be called supper. The findings set Scots apart from our neighbours in the north of England where the evening meal is often referred to as tea.
For example, you may have heard Australians pronounce the word dinner as dinna. Keep this in mind when listening to Australians, especially the locals that have strong accents.
grub = a slang word for food.
Tea means dinner. For example, your Australian friend might ask you, “Wanna come around for tea at 6?” Your friend isn't inviting you over to his place just to drink a cup of tea, he means dinner.
Across England as a whole, the majority (57%) call it “dinner”, while just over a third (36%) opt for “tea”. The remainder either call it something else (including 5% who say “supper”) or answered “don't know”. However, despite dinner's overall victory, the data shows there are clear geographical differences.
'Afternoon tea', however, is traditionally a selection of light sandwiches, cakes and scones served with a pot of tea. You may also have heard the terminology 'high tea'; this is often misinterpreted, especially by tourists.
Dinner and supper are both used to refer to the main meal of the day, and especially to that meal as eaten in the evening. Supper is used especially when the meal is an informal one eaten at home, while dinner tends to be the term chosen when the meal is more formal.
Contributor's comments: 'Big lunch' is so called to distinguish it from the shorter mid-morning break called (in 1960s central and north Queensland, at least) 'little lunch.