Welcome, %1$s. Please login or register.
April 23, 2024, 10:07:03 AM

 
Posts that, in my personal judgement, create too much conflict in the community, may be deleted - If members repost the same topic, they may be banned from future posts - Even though I have disabled the Registration, send me an email at:  vtgrandpa@yahoo.com if you want to register and I will do that for you
Posts: 46156 Topics: 17664 Members: 517
Newest Member: Christy25
*
+  Henry Raymond
|-+  Fairfax News
| |-+  Tales Of Our Community
| | |-+  Dinner - Supper / Lunch - Dinner
« previous next »
: [1]
: Dinner - Supper / Lunch - Dinner  ( 9913 )
Henry
Administrator
Hero Member
*****
: 15235



« : July 07, 2009, 09:01:17 AM »

Its interesting how we retain our upbringing, no matter how old we get.  I put up a post a little while ago and identified the time as suppertime.  Being brought up on the farm, we had three meals a day, breakfast, dinner and supper.  Once I left home and started working elsewhere, found out that nobody had supper anymore.  Dinner time for me was lunch for them and supper for me was dinner for them.

Back when my parents were alive and we invited them down for dinner, my mother and father would have arrived around 11:30 a.m.

The old time farm families wouldn't think of having dinner any other time but around noon.  Years from now, supper may be a forgotten word.

All of my reminders for the Senior Luncheons say, "Senior Dinner."
« : July 07, 2009, 09:03:29 AM Henry »

Henry Raymond
Loctavious
Hero Member
*****
: 559


Follow The White Rabbit


« #1 : July 07, 2009, 09:45:38 AM »

Was dinner another name for lunch Henry?  or was there something in the meal that made it a 'dinner' or is it supper?

"Conservatives see any progress outside of what they approve of as the 'liberal agenda'.  Apparently no one told them they and what they think aren't any better than the rest of us"

"A closed mind is more dangerous than an ignorant one"
edakrupp
Guest


« #2 : July 07, 2009, 12:46:52 PM »

The Dinner or large meal was traditionally in the middle of the day, (sometimes followed by a siesta) and still is in many parts of the worlds. Supper was a light and easily digested meal at the end of the day to take the edge off prior to bed. The old saying goes: breakfast, eat as a king, Lunch a Prince, and dinner a Pauper.  I'm not sure when the switch came, but alot of out present day tradition came into habit around the industrial revolution, Machinery and industry made it hard for people to leave their jobs and join their families in the middle of the day.
Judi
Hero Member
*****
: 508



« #3 : July 24, 2009, 09:38:15 AM »

Growing up in Morrisville, we had breakfast, lunch and supper. Dinner referred to the noon meals on Sunday and Holidays because it was always a several course meal or as my Dad called it " a big to do"!
dearon
Full Member
***
: 233


« #4 : July 24, 2009, 09:59:22 AM »

I grew up on a farm in Georgia Plains, it was Breakfast, dinner and supper. 
I found this translation on the internet which was quite interesting:

Breakfast, dinner, tea (6o/c-ish) = 'working class', with 'dinner' used even if the midday meal was only something light (a sandwich, etc), and 'tea' used even if it was a heavy meal.

2. Breakfast, lunch, dinner (7o/c-ish) = 'lower/middle middle class'.

3. Breakfast, lunch, supper (8o/c-ish) = 'upper middle' or 'upper class', with 'dinner' reserved for formal evening meals, and 'tea' for a light meal of sandwiches etc at 4o/c-ish.

But now that it's all been exhaustively tabulated by sociologists and writers on etiquette, people are more self-conscious in their choice of terms, and it's no longer an accurate social indicator. I'm not myself convinced that the 'working/middle/upper class' distinction holds true.

dinner--->A banquet or formal meal in honor of a person or an event.
supper--->A light evening meal when dinner is taken at midday
Mike Raburn
Hero Member
*****
: 2565



« #5 : September 05, 2009, 11:53:00 PM »

I just call it eating, but I did know the difference between supper and dinner as explained here,
Take the punk outta Vermont but you cannot take the Vermont outta the punk.
msm
Full Member
***
: 211


« #6 : September 12, 2009, 05:23:30 PM »

From a former Fairfax Farmboy ----  breakfast,  dinner and supper --- just like Henry --   This was during the 60s & 70s --   and Noon was the exact time for Dinner ---  :-) 


Mike M
mirjo
Hero Member
*****
: 785



« #7 : October 14, 2009, 03:39:54 AM »

My memere used to make a boiled dinner, but never a boiled supper. I wonder what the distinction is there? ;-)

I grew up using both terms mostly. My grandmother who grew up on a farm always made a big 'dinner' at noon and we often had Sunday 'dinner' with my other grandmother who didn't grow up on a farm. At home it was supper or dinner, I guess it just depended on whatever people were feeling at the time their mouth opened. Oddly enough, every weekend  we had brunch, but never once called it that. It was always a 'late breakfast' or something like that. It was the full onslaught of bacon/sausage, eggs, homefries, frenchtoast...between 11a-12n on Sat or Sun.

We're just a planet of bizarre creatures really.

If the world gives you melons, you might be dyslexic
: [1]  
« previous next »
:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP SMF 2.0.18 | SMF © 2021, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!