That depends on how formal the meal is, and what sort of cuisine is being served.
What type of food have you in mind - a main course or a dessert? If there are appetisers, the soup is the second course, if not, it is the first course..... so we're off to a confusing start already.
3 course meal: the courses would be appetizer, main entry (most commonly meat) with dessert being the third course.
4 course meal: appetier, soup or salad, the third course being the main dish, and lastly, dessert.
the 1st course of a meal is the starter
the 2nd is the main
and the 3rd is the desert!
The final course of any meal is Dessert.
the last portion
dinner! yummm my favorite!
dessert
Dessert
Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.Okay, first of all it is not mensa secundae, it its mensa secunda, the adjective has to agree with the noun. Second, it was the dessert course of a meal, not a meal in itself.
antipasti
A meal that has more then one courses. meaning, for example: first you would get a salad. Then when you finish the salad you get a main course. Then when you finish your main course you get dessert.
A 5 course meal is a meal that is served in five parts. A typical 5 course meal would consist of soup, salad, starter, main course and dessert.
The word is spelled course. Example: They enjoyed a three-course meal.
the entrance or the first dish of a three course meal
A 5 course meal is a meal that is served in five parts. A typical 5 course meal would consist of soup, salad, starter, main course and dessert.
Entree is the main course of a meal.
A meal with soup followed by an entree is 'two course'
* The first course at a formal meal is the soup. However. the host/hostess may not service soup so it would be the salad.
During a 7 course meal, each course would be small and would amass to a meal overall that should leave the diners "stuffed" and satisfied. The first course being a soup (liquid) would not fill the diners up too soon. Personally, I think seven courses sound like the meals historically served up to King Henry VIII and his court in Merry England!
A four course meal is a meal served in four quantities, including an appetizer; normally served in a restaurant.