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folklaur Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:50pm | IP Logged
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I am curious --
do you call the last meal of the day "dinner" or "supper"? And regionally, where are you?
How about the "mid day meal"? Is it "lunch" or is it something else where you live?
Thanks,
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trish Forum All-Star
Joined: April 11 2007 Location: Canada
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:54pm | IP Logged
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We call the last meal of the day supper and lunch... lunch or dinner. We live in Alberta Canada. However my inlaws from one province ( Saskatchewan ) over call supper... dinner. So when we visit I get confused as to what's for dinner..... .
__________________ ~ Trish ~
Wife to Les
Mom to 8 Wonderful Kids
+AMDG+
Saintly Soaps
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Paula in MN Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:55pm | IP Logged
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I have always called the noon meal lunch and the 5 p.m. meal dinner. I grew up in the Twin Cities, and now live in Northern Minnesota.
I remember my Grandparent's calling the noon meal dinner and the 5 p.m. meal supper. They grew up on farms and lived in Southern Minnesota.
This is a fun topic - I've always wondered about these phrases. Can't wait to see other responses!
__________________ Paula
A Catholic Harvest
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Rebecca Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:58pm | IP Logged
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We live in northern Ohio and while I was growing up, my parents called the noon meal "lunch" and the evening meal "supper". My husband who grew up on the PA/OH border calls the evening meal "dinner".
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Anne McD Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:58pm | IP Logged
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I'm from upstate NY, but here in NOVA we (my family) still say lunch and dinner. However, my dad, born and bread in upstate NY will sometimes call dinner supper, and refers to breakfast as breakie, which I think is Austrailian, right?
__________________ Anne
Wife to Jon
Mommy to Alex 9
James 8
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and baby on the way! 10/14
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kingvozzo Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 12:59pm | IP Logged
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Midday meal is lunch. Our last meal is supper or dinner--used inter-changeably. I grew up in NYC...
__________________ Noreen
Wife to Ed
Mom to 4 great kids and 10 sweet ones in Our Lady's arms
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Becky Parker Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 1:04pm | IP Logged
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We have lunch at noon and dinner at 6 PM. We live in Michigan.
__________________ Becky
Wife to Wes, Mom to 6 wonderful kids on Earth and 4 in Heaven!
Academy Of The Good Shepherd
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JodieLyn Forum Moderator
Joined: Sept 06 2006 Location: Oregon
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 1:06pm | IP Logged
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lunch and dinner here in OR, grew up in California
My theory is.. that generally dinner was the big meal of the day.. lunch was the midday meal if it was smaller than the dinner in the evening.. or supper was the smaller meal in the evening if dinner was midday.
that generally dinner and supper were agrarian and lunch and dinner were urban
though off of that you have people who had dinner and supper traditionally end up living more urban and so they mirrored the components of lunch and dinner.. but kept the names that people grew up hearing.
__________________ Jodie, wife to Dave
G-18, B-17, G-15, G-14, B-13, B-11, G-9, B-7, B-5, B-4
All men who have turned out worth anything have had the chief hand in their own education.
-Sir Walter Scott
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Dawn Forum All-Star
Joined: June 12 2005 Location: Massachusetts
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 1:21pm | IP Logged
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We have lunch at noon and supper at the end of the day. Dinner is what we have on holidays and Sundays around 1 p.m. - as in Thanksgiving Dinner or Sunday Dinner. It's a bigger, more formal meal.
I grew up north of Boston and still live here!
__________________ Dawn, mum to 3 boys
By Sun and Candlelight
The Nature Corner
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Maryan Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 1:31pm | IP Logged
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kingvozzo wrote:
Midday meal is lunch. Our last meal is supper or dinner--used inter-changeably. |
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Ditto -- I grew up in CT (now in NOVA)
I'll only add that, similar to Dawn. ... "Dinner" is the big meal in the afternoon on Thanksgiving (or Easter, etc.)... BUT we have three meals on holidays -- and and "Supper" is the leftovers of Hot Open Faced Turkey sandwiches in the evening.
That's the only time that I can think where the names switch a bit.
It's fun to hear the differences!
__________________ Maryan
Mom to 6 boys & 1 girl: JP('01), B ('03), M('05), L('06), Ph ('08), M ('10), James born 5/1/12
A Lee in the Woudes
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Taffy Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 1:37pm | IP Logged
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Well, I grew up in British Columbia and lunch was at midday and supper and dinner were essentially interchangeable although dinner would be an earlier evening meal than supper.
When I moved to southern Saskatchewan, I learned that dinner is the noon meal, supper is in the evening and lunch was served after a late night meeting or concert!
I've given up on ever figuring this one out!
__________________ Susan
Mom to 5 on earth and 1 in heaven
Susan's Soliloquy
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Matilda Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 2:19pm | IP Logged
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I live in North Texas and we eat lunch at noon and dinner around 6 pm. My mom grew up in South Texas and she always ate supper at noon and dinner in the evening. Go figure!
__________________ Charlotte (Matilda)
Mom to four (11, 10, 9 & 5) an even split for now
with bookend boys and a double girl sandwich
Waltzing Matilda
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extremeknitter Forum Rookie
Joined: March 08 2007 Location: Texas
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 2:44pm | IP Logged
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midday = lunch
evening = supper OR dinner.... interchangeable.
I think it is all the moving dh and I did as children and over the course of our marriage. We lived in Europe, upper midwest, midwest, south, west and east coasts. I guess we're just a bit confused.
__________________ blessings and peace,
~knitter
mom to 6 terrific kids (ages 21 down to 1) and 10 little saints
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joann10 Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 2:45pm | IP Logged
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We are in central NY and we have lunch at noon and supper at 6:00. My farming grandparents always had dinner at noon and supper in the evening.
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MacBeth Forum All-Star
Probably at the beach...
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 2:47pm | IP Logged
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Dawn wrote:
We have lunch at noon and supper at the end of the day. Dinner is what we have on holidays and Sundays around 1 p.m. - as in Thanksgiving Dinner or Sunday Dinner. It's a bigger, more formal meal.
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Dawn's right. These are the real names for the meals in question.
__________________ God Bless!
MacBeth in NY
Don's wife since '88; "Mom" to the Fab 4
Nature Study
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folklaur Forum All-Star
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 2:53pm | IP Logged
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Oh, this IS fun! Thank you for answering! What made me think of it was I was reading Boxcar Children to dd4, and they use supper/dinner (no "lunch"). Then I thought about how we used "dinner/supper" interchangably. Except, as when mentioned, when you are talking about a "formal" meal (Sunday Dinner, Christmas Dinner) but then it is usually earlier in the day. I hadn't realized that until it was mentioned! I grew up in NJ. So then I wondered about everyone else
It must be the linguistic anthropologist in me . Actually, in my linguistics class in college (here in Arizona), the Prof. made me say the words, "Mary, Marry, and Merry" during class one time. Being from NJ, each of those words sounds distinct when I say them, but here in AZ (and CO where dh is from) there is no difference between Mary and Marry, and little for Merry.
I really do find this so interesting!
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stacykay Forum All-Star
Joined: April 08 2006 Location: Michigan
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 2:55pm | IP Logged
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Another Michigander, here...
I grew up with lunch at noon, and dinner, sometimes supper, at 6P.
My dh, who grew up 3-4 miles away from me, had dinner at noon and supper at 6P. I don't know if this has anything to do with it, but his parents are all-Polish- maybe a European thing? Now that I think of it, my mum (who only said "dinner,") was raised in MO, with family that has been in N. America since 1600's. My dad, whose parents were from England and Germany, will often say "supper."
Not sure how that pans out for others?
God Bless,
Stacy in MI
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helene Forum Pro
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 3:50pm | IP Logged
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Growing up in the Northeast we always called the last meal of the day "supper." I later went to college in California and referred to this meal as "supper" in conversation with an 18 year old friend. His eyes lit up. He held up a huge imaginary triangle (or even worse, was it a milk pail?) and pretended to clang it loudly with a metal spoon yelling, "SUUUUUUKIE! Y'ALL! SUUUUUUPPERTIME!"..........I have called it "dinner" ever since.
__________________ Happy Mom to five girls (20,17,13,11and 4) and five boys (19, 15, 10, 8 and 6)
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MaryM Board Moderator
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 4:07pm | IP Logged
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That's a very funny story, Helene.
JodieLyn wrote:
My theory is.. that generally dinner was the big meal of the day.. lunch was the midday meal if it was smaller than the dinner in the evening.. or supper was the smaller meal in the evening if dinner was midday.
that generally dinner and supper were agrarian and lunch and dinner were urban |
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I believe Jodie is right on target with the general distinctions here. I grew up (in Idaho) with breakfast-lunch-dinner/supper, except when we stayed at my granparent's farm (European immigrants-agrarian culture) when it was breakfast - dinner - supper (the mid-day dinner being the biggest meal).
I found this on answers.com - very interesting.
The Invention of Dinner
Throughout history, city dwellers tended to dine later and longer. Also, many travelers made the evening meal their main meal, as this was the time when they and their horses generally settled into an inn. In agrarian communities, however, where work began at daybreak, the first and principal meal occurred in the middle of the day. In medieval Europe, this midday meal was ideally eaten at the ninth hour after sunrise or "none," from which the word "noon" derives its meaning. This meal might have been taken in the fields and, especially in hotter climates such as the Mediterranean, been followed by a siesta.
__________________ Mary M. in Denver
Our Domestic Church
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doris Forum All-Star
Joined: April 24 2006 Location: United Kingdom
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Posted: May 01 2007 at 4:14pm | IP Logged
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Breakfast, lunch and supper here for us in the UK!
Having said that, lots of people would say dinner for the midday meal -- for example, it's always 'school dinner' not school lunch, and my mother (who says lunch otherwise) would say 'dinner' to refer to a small child's midday meal. And it's always 'Christmas dinner', never Christmas lunch.
I think it's also regional/class related here. The evening meal is more often 'tea' in the north of England. In Scotland, they would have 'tea' as their evening meal, and then supper as a small snack before bed (milk and biscuits or similar). I know people (some of whom I'm related to ) who are very sniffy about people who say 'tea' for their evening meal. ('Tea' of course is well known to all 4Realers as a light afternoon meal consisting of sandwiches, cakes and, well, tea.)
__________________ Home educating in London, UK with dd (2000) ds (2002), dd (2004), ds (2008) and dd (2011).
Frabjous Days
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