Prandium was eaten at 11 a.m. and was more like a snack. it usually consisted of leftover from the prodigious dinner (cena) or meat and bread. Dinner was the important meal and rich people threw lavish dinner parties.
In ancient Rome dinner was the main meal. Breakfast and lunch were usually snacks.
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They usually took a short rest after lunch and then set back out to finish their daily work.
Lunch in Latin is "prandium". To lunch would be "prandere" (the verb).
The children of the rich had a tutor and they studied at home. Presumably they had lunch at home. The children of humble background went to classes set up by teachers for fee. Rome did not have a state-run school system. These classes were run in whatever space the teachers could find: private homes, a gymnasium, at the back of a shop with a curtain for separation from the shop, or in the street. We do not know what the class hours were and therefore we do not know where the children had lunch. Lunch for the Romans was like a snack. Poor families could not afford to send their children to classes. Education was not compulsory.
Probably 5th period because there are usually four class periods before the lunch break and Bella went from lunch to Biology.
The poor in Rome lived off mainly bread and porridge. Prandium, which was a bit like lunch because it was eaten at 11 am-noon, was a light meal, quite like a snack. It was common to eat the leftovers from the supper (cena) of the day before.
They had seven courses of dates, chickens, oxes, peacocks, ducks jellyfish and vulture! They had grapes (obviously) and there was a drink called muslum(boiled wine and honey). THey had lots more exotic things that I can't remember right now. If this is 2 little info, just look on Google.
sit next to her in lunch class and be extra nice to her and throw her lunch away and walk her to class and make sure you dont smell bad.
If he/she isn't in your class, try to talk to him/her at recess, in the hallways, or at lunch.