No-one (almost) does so at home, but old-fashioned and traditional restaurants will serve one or more of these - cucumber Sandwiches (usually with crusts removed) individual small cakes or slices of seriously wicked cake freshly-made fruit scones with butter and/or clotted cream and jam Traditional English tea is strong - far stronger than most people outside of the UK would drink, with a little milk, sugar to taste.
cookie
crumpet
cake
crackers
bread
coffee
High Tea
when you put tea in the cup, you then put the cup on the saucer to prevent tea from spilling onto the table or to protect the table from the cup. And it makes carrying the cup a lot easier. try tea with biscuits for an english touch :)
You put tea in a cup
Your question makes little sense. "English tea" is a adjective-noun combination that creates more specificity for the noun (tea) by giving it a state or character (English). There are a number of things one can do with English tea, such as drink it, pour it, mix it, press it, and so forth, but "I English tea-ed you" is not a valid sentence because "English tea" is not a verb.
English Tea - song - was created in 2005.
it becomes tea
"Shai" is the Kikuyu word for the English word "tea".
Because tea tastes niecececee i am english and i love tea, coffee is crap
no
To write in passive voice, you put the actor (subject) second. Active - Sammy made tea. Passive - The tea was made by Sammy. Passive voice often has the word by before the actor. Note: Instead of I made tea, you would need to write, "The tea was made by me." About how to make tea, think about the precise steps to make tea. Put these in chronological order. Write about each step, but in passive voice.
There is no such English phrase as "tea of a cup." You either have a cup of tea, or you have tea in a cup.
Quite often. 2 cups of tea a day is common