What a fun thread! Who knew that talking about snacks could make me so hungry.
Quote:
Originally Posted by irmamar
En España "almuerzo" equivale a "comida" (lunch), aunque no se utiliza mucho esa palabra:
Desayuno: breakfast. Se desayuna por la mañana y después se toma un café a media mañana (otro desayuno)
Comida o almuerzo (lunch): aquí se suele comer tarde, a partir de las 14 ó 14:30 h. Yo misma como entre 15:30 y 16 h.
Merienda (snack  ): los niños comen más pronto, sobre las 13 ó 13:30 y hacen una merienda a media tarde, alrededor de las 18 h.
Cena (dinner): aquí se cena tarde, a partir de las 21 h. como muy pronto. En muchas casas se cena a las 22 h. Los niños pequeños cenan antes, sobre las 20 ó 20:30 h.
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Irma - does "media mañana" simply mean "middle of the morning" (or "mid-morning") ... or does it refer to a specific time in the morning?
Quote:
Originally Posted by bobjenkins
Sí, usualmente no hay un tiempo diario lo que se merienda. Te doy algunos ejemplos
Snack = pequeño alimento (small meal)
I ate some chips earlier, it was just a snack
The snack was small, I am still hungry
Sometimes I wake up hungry and have a small quick snack in the morning because I don't have time for breakfast
En españa como dijiste, ¿es mariendar a un tiempo cierto?
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Bob - I think you left out the most important kind of snack ... the MIDNIGHT snack.
Quote:
Originally Posted by AngelicaDeAlquezar
Snack can be "bocadillo", "refrigerio", "tentempié"... and when it is applied to diets, they call it "colación" (something eaten between breakfast and lunch or between lunch and dinner/supper).
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Great words to have on hand, Malila - thanks!
Quote:
Originally Posted by brute
What is a PBJ Sandwich?
A snack is usually a handful of food eaten when you are peckish.
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Are you asking to define "PBJ"? It's "peanut butter and jelly". Or are you asking if it could be a snack? It could totally be a snack ... but could also be someone's lunch....