English Meals Исполнитель
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English Meals
There are four meals a day in an English home: breakfast, lunch, tea and dinner. Breakfast is the first meal of the day. It is at about 8 o’clock in the morning, and consists of porridge with milk and salt or sugar, boiled or fried eggs, and bread and butter with marmalade or jam. Some people like to drink tea, but others prefer coffee. Instead of porridge they may have fruit juice, or they may prefer biscuits.
The usual time for lunch is 1 o’clock. This meal starts with soup or fruit juice. This is followed by some meat or poultry with boiled or fried potatoes, carrots and beans. Pudding is often next. Instead of the pudding some people prefer cheese and biscuits. Last of all comes coffee, black or with milk. English people often drink something with lunch. Water is usually on the table. Some people prefer juice or lemonade.
Tea is the third meal of the day. It is between 4 and 5 o’clock, the so-called 5 o’clock tea. On the table there is tea, milk or cream, sugar, bread and butter, cakes and jam. Friends and visitors are often present at tea.
Dinner is the fourth meal of the day. The usual time for dinner is about 7 o’clock, and all the members of the family sit down together. Dinner usually consists of soup, fish or meat with vegetables (potatoes, green beans, carrots or cabbage), sweet pudding, fruit salad, and ice-cream or cheese and biscuits. Then, after a talk, they have coffee.
This is the order of meals among many English families, but most people in towns, and nearly all country people, have dinner in the middle of the day instead of lunch. They have tea a little later, between 5 and 6 o’clock. Then in the evening, before going to bed, they have supper. So the four meals of the day are either breakfast, dinner, tea and supper; or breakfast, lunch, tea and dinner.
Comprehension Questions
- How many meals are traditionally eaten in England?
- What drinks usually accompany each meal?
- What do the English usually eat at each meal?
- Some people eat their meals at different times. Why?
Discussion Questions
- When do you eat your meals and with whom?
- Compare what you eat for breakfast and what an English family eats for breakfast.
- What role do different drinks play in meals in your home? Is this similar in England?
- What role does conversation have in your meals?
- How does work, in the city and in the country, affect when and what people in Uzbekistan eat? People in England? Why?