If it's eaten at lunch time, it's breakfast, supper, and dinner. Take breakfast have breakfast eat breakfast i eat/take/have. Breakfast burrito cheese latkes rancher's eggs rolled ham and swiss omelet smoked gouda and vegetable poached egg sandwich smoky frittata southwestern frittata spinach and.
However, both interpretations seem to fit. Can't decide between 'at breakfast' and 'for breakfast' in the following sentence. I know 'at' is about time, and 'for' is about food.
Unfortunately some teachers in peru especially at schools and at universities tell students that take breakfast is correct: Hello i have read some threads but i don't find my answer. I like to eat breakfast i like to have breakfast. Any difference in meaning btw the 2?
Which one is more common in england english. Is it a regional or personal preference? My mother, an oklahoma prairie girl, said that supper is the larger meal of the day after breakfast. Hello everyone, i would like to know how do you call the noun fast (as in a period of time when one abstains from eating) in your language?