"Dinner" might indicate the noontime meal or the evening meal, depending on which is the main meal of the day. In American usage, "Dinner" is used to indicate the noon meal on Sundays and holidays. It also continues to indicate the noon meal in many rural areas, particularly in the Old South. ... A light meal between lunch and supper (always the evening meal) is usually called a snack. Some Americans will attempt to mimic British usage by referring to a small meal in the afternoon as "tea."
Snacks in between breakfast and lunch are called brunch.
Additional information:
In the U.S., a snack between breakfast and lunch is called a Coffee Break.
"Brunch" generally connotes a mid-morning meal that replaces both breakfast and lunch.
Afternoon tea is a light snack between lunch and dinner, as morning tea is a light snack between breakfast and lunch.
A snack.
Lunch.
Lunch
Lunch, or can be dinner if it is the largest meal of the day.
YES the Three meals are Breakfast, Dinner and Tea/Lunch
Dinner or lunch. Pianoplayers
Lunch or dinner.
Lunch
Right. Lunch is the heaviest meal of the day.
A meal is something like lunch or dinner. A mango is eaten like a snack or a side dish.
A menu is what you order food from. A meal is what you eat.
Lunch or dinner.
Lunch is the midday meal it can also be called "luncheon". Sometimes if your main meal of the day is taken at midday, you could also use the word "dinner" but dinner would also apply if your main meal was at night. Thus "dinner" is the main meal of the day whenever it is taken.