Chicken tikka masala, 1971, adapted from Indian chicken tikka and called "a true British national dish."
Chicken tikka masala may have been topping favourite dish polls for a decade, but it seems most Briton's idea of "food heaven" is a traditional roast. The Sunday lunch favourite was cited by 43 per cent of Brits as their ultimate comfort food, followed by the pub grub classic steak and chips, by 35 per cent.
British cuisine has long been categorized as "bad" for its supposed poor food, lack of imagination, stodgy puddings, and weak tea. With a history of wartime rationing, industrialization, and now the domination of giant supermarkets, it is no surprise that this false impression has developed.
A Sunday Roast should be served at exactly 3:15pm in the afternoon. Necessities are three slices of beef, four roast potatoes and gravy all over the plate, but not drowning the food is a must.
The beans are going to be done when they want. Yes, Brits eat beans for breakfast because the England is known for its Full English Breakfast (picture above) consisting of sunny-side up eggs, English back bacon, cooked tomato slices, black pudding and fried bread. Baked bean originated in the U.S.
The Passive Aggressive List
| What the British Say | What the British mean |
|---|
| 40. Each to their own | You're wrong, but never mind |
| 41. Pop round anytime | Please stay away from my house |
| 42 I'm just popping out for lunch, does anyone want anything? | I'm getting my own lunch now, please remain silent |
In most of the United Kingdom (namely, the North of England, North and South Wales, the English Midlands, Scotland, and some rural and working class areas of Northern Ireland) people traditionally call their midday meal dinner and their evening meal tea (served around 6 pm), whereas the upper social classes would call
A common lunch in England is a sandwich, but dinner might include soup, meat with vegetables, and then a dessert like apple pie and ice cream. So, dinner is really the main meal and people might have it in the middle of the day or in the evening. Lunch and supper are both light kinds of meal.
The distinction between dinner and supper was common in United States farming communities into the twentieth century, especially in the Mid-West and the American South, though today, most Americans consider the two synonyms and strongly prefer the term dinner for the evening meal.
Just one in twenty surveyed (5 per cent) called the meal supper, which was later deemed to be a sign someone is posh. Supper has always referred to a lighter evening meal, and comes from the old French word souper. It is perhaps the most time specific out of the three.
In many modern usages, the term dinner refers to the evening meal, which is now typically the largest meal of the day in Western cultures. When this meaning is used, the preceding meals are usually referred to as breakfast, lunch and perhaps a tea.
It stems from the Old French word souper, meaning an evening meal, and it's generally lighter than other meals served throughout the day. In the 1800s and perhaps even earlier, Americans in some rural regions started calling their midday meal dinner, while supper was reserved for the evening meal.
Supper is a meal taken in the evening. It was originally a secondary lighter evening meal. The main meal of the day, called dinner, used to be served closer to what is known as lunchtime, around the middle of the day, but crept later over the centuries, mostly over the course of the 19th century.
Everything is bite-sized and eaten with fingers. Afternoon tea time is around 4PM, between lunch and dinner. The light meal is not meant to replace dinner but instead to tide you over until dinner which was usually at 8PM for the upper class.
"Cuppa" - While generally a term reserved for tea, it is used mainly in the home and often infers instant - tea or coffee.
“High” tea is actually dinner but has also come to mean a lavish afternoon tea. This eventually evolved into the lower classes calling their midday meal “dinner” and their evening meal “tea”, while the upper classes called their midday meal “lunch” and referred to the evening meal as “dinner”.
Only black tea is considered real for a cup of tea in Britain. Black tea is the dried and fermented leaves of the tea plant, Camellia sinensis. Fill a kettle with fresh water and bring to the boil.
Of those who said they used different terms*** depending on the food being served or the time it was eaten, most said that tea referred to a light late afternoon meal, dinner was a larger meal and supper was either an informal or casual hot meal served later in the evening, or a light snack eaten after dinner.
Dinner – refers to a meal at night (after evening, 7pm to 10 pm).
Whilst the custom of drinking tea dates back to the third millennium BC in China and was popularised in England during the 1660s by King Charles II and his wife the Portuguese Infanta Catherine de Braganza, it was not until the mid 19th century that the concept of 'afternoon tea' first appeared.
Each day at 5 p.m. precisely, the Queen indulges in high tea, where she treats herself to a full afternoon spread. There's more tea (ugh), scones, and finger sandwiches.
'Tea' is widely used as a name for the evening meal. This is more common in Scotland and the north of England but you can hear it all over the country. Usually it is the main meal of the day, eaten between 5 and 7. So, 'teatime' refers to the meal and not the drink.
“Have you had your dinner?” Is the correct sentence. The verb 'have had' is in present perfect tense.
If the first date and follow-on phone conversations go well, then ask her out for dinner. Perhaps it goes without saying, but before asking for out for dinner, always discover whether she is single, open to dating and interested in you. Don't ask her out if a simple question can identify she is not available.
Correct is what did you eat. Two past tense can not be present in the same sentence. Did and ate are past tense, hence if you have used did, which is a past tense, then ate will become eat.
“Have you eaten dinner” is a perfectly understandable and grammatically correct question. However, there are other ways to say it: “Have you had dinner?” is a little more conversational. “Have” is a verb you can substitute for “eat” in American English.
'Have you had your dinner? ' is correct. It is someone asking another person directly or by message at a given instant; it is happening in the present. It is a question asking whether the dinner has already been had or taken. So, a question about the past, asked in present tense.
'Have you had your dinner? ' is correct. It is a question asking whether the dinner has already been had or taken. So, a question about the past, asked in present tense.
Both of them are correct. But yes, they do mean different. I feel that 'have a dinner' refers to event and 'have dinner' refers to actual supper someone(maybe speaker) going to have. When one says "have a dinner, it would be referring to a formal feast or banquet (see definition 1b).
You should reply, "Yes, have you had yours yet?"/"Yes, have you had lunch yet?"