My girlfriend says that you should wait 15-20mins before you get a second portion.
If it is a high end dinner at a hostesses home then they will generally tell their guests to help themselves. If you at a friends home and have been invited for dinner then it is polite to say 'may I have more potatoes please' or whatever you feel you want. Watch how much food is in bowls or on platters and if the food is almost gone then do not ask for a second helping unless the hostess offers.
Food Paradise - 2007 Steak Paradise 2 A Second Helping 2-2 was released on: USA: 3 December 2008
A second helping, or "seconds," is when one has eaten all of their first plate or portion of food, and then gets another (second) plate or portion during the same meal.
second (on a clock) = shniya (שנייה). Plural is shniyot שניות)second (ordinal number) = sheni (שני) seconds (second helping of food) = manah nosefet (מנה נוספת)
Its easy, if someone asks for a second helping of your dish you can say they liked your cooking. if you find leftovers of your dish on their plates it means they dont like your food. does this answer your question or am i misunderstood
A helping refers to a serve of food.An extra helping therefore is another serve of food.
you can not eat or drink at least 4 hours before the procedure
a serving
ethnocentrism
to keep them safe and to have a lot of food
References to your plate can be either literal or metaphorical. Literally, your plate is your dinner plate, it is the food you are having for dinner. Metaphorically, it is the business before you (much as if you were having dinner, then the food you are eating would be the business before you). Thus, sometimes people will claim to have too much work on their plate.
Fundamentally, yes: That is the definition of helping verbs. However, two English verbs, "be" and "have", are both normal verbs and helping verbs and can be paired with themselves, so that a sentence may have only one root verb in two distinct words, one of which is helping and the other of which is not. Note that the words need not necessarily have different forms: In the sentence, "The prisoners had had no food since morning", the first instance of "had" is a helping verb, specifically helping form the past perfect tense, but the second instance of "had" is not.