It's not 'Tea' it's dinner

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Soldato
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Why on earth do northerners call it tea? There is lunch, tea and dinner where I come from. Tea is cakes and a cup of tea at 3 to 4pm. Dinner is the evening meal. Northerners, honestly :)
 
It's basically the mean hot meal of the day, deal with it.

Originally, dinner referred to the first meal of a two-meal day, a heavy meal occurring about noon, which broke the night's fast in the new day. The word is from the Old French (ca 1300) disner, meaning "breakfast", from the stem of Gallo-Romance desjunare ("to break one's fast"), from Latin dis- ("undo") + Late Latin ieiunare ("to fast"), from Latin ieiunus ("fasting, hungry").[3][4] Eventually, the term shifted to referring to the heavy main meal of the day, even if it had been preceded by a breakfast meal. The (lighter) meal following dinner has traditionally been referred to as supper or tea..

Hot meal at school dinner.
Sip day roast at midday is the main meal, so is dinner.
Where most working people have main meal in the evening so that's dinner.
 
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This may just blow your mind, but in other parts of the world, they even speak different languages, let alone dialects.

Honestly, this sort of thing is pathetic. Get over yourself.
 
I'm actually from the north (liverpool) and never understood why people call it breakfast - dinner - tea.
Breakfast - lunch - dinner makes much more sense to me.

But then in Cantonese, the phrase for lunch (yam cha) literally means in english "drink tea" and dinner (sig fan) is "eat rice"
 
\o/ for not having a thread like this for all of three months. Well Done. I'm sure 'Northeners could start a thread about breakfast dinner and tea. This thread is a waste of bandwidth.
 
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