Poll: I have a score to settle

What is it?

  • Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner

    Votes: 619 63.6%
  • Breakfast, Dinner and Tea

    Votes: 264 27.1%
  • Or some other weird combination... So PANCAKE!

    Votes: 91 9.3%

  • Total voters
    974
Breakfast = ~8am
Coffee time = ~11am
Lunch/Dinner = ~1pm
Tea (and sandwiches) = ~4pm
Supper = ~6pm


Again, just like all OcUK debates, it's a regional/family thing
 
Breakfast, Dinner and Tea!

But since joining the Raf I've slowly been saying Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner more though. :(

I must stand by being Northern!
 
So if a pretty girl ask you:

"Would you like to have dinner with me sometime?"

Do you say:

A - Sure, pick you up after work at your place?
B - Sure, meet you at Subway at 1 o'clock?

or

C - Do you mean Lunch, Dinner, Tea or Suppler darling?
 
So if a pretty girl ask you:

"Would you like to have dinner with me sometime?"

Do you say:

A - Sure, pick you up after work at your place?
B - Sure, meet you at Subway at 1 o'clock?

or

C - Do you mean Lunch, Dinner, Tea or Suppler darling?

irrelevant :/ even if one called in lunch and one called it tea, you'd still need a time.

but if someone said that i'd assume subway/coffee shop or something, not a meal.
 
Breakfast is 7am
Lunch/Dinner is 12pm
Tea is 5pm

If someone asked me to dinner it would be midday.
 
More accurately, if someone ask you out to Dinner, are you expecting sitting down with waiter service, or sandwiches ?

Personally, when I ask someone out to dinner, I mean evening meal, sit down, a few hours of talking etc.
 
So if a pretty girl ask you:

"Would you like to have dinner with me sometime?"

Up here we use the word 'meal' in that context.
We'd never ask anybody if they wanted to go for dinner - that sounds reet poncy.

Anyway, I asked earlier, what did you called the ladies who served your meal at school?
Lunch ladies? - I think not.
 
Dinner = 1900-2000

I'm Northern, but not a pleb

Anyway, I asked earlier, what did you called the ladies who served your meal at school?
Lunch ladies? - I think not.

a1150119a991407d3dbb2f551da350bd.png
 
Up here we use the word 'meal' in that context.
We'd never ask anybody if they wanted to go for dinner - that sounds reet poncy.

Anyway, I asked earlier, what did you called the ladies who served your meal at school?
Lunch ladies? - I think not.

abso-bloody-exactly!

alan.jpg
 
Dinner is for the evenings.

Breakfast isn't always a fast break, either...dinner ladies are called dinner ladies because they are plebs. The term is ironic.
 
Up here we use the word 'meal' in that context.
We'd never ask anybody if they wanted to go for dinner - that sounds reet poncy.

Anyway, I asked earlier, what did you called the ladies who served your meal at school?
Lunch ladies? - I think not.

I repeat.

Lunch time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
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