How about Noon - I admit it does not itself imply food.
"Madam, in Eden, I'm Adam."
You can, but it is not idiomatic English. If you mean that people worked straight through their lunch time, use No one took lunch
You would say "Kei te waikīkī te waiparoro" in Maori to mean "It is time for lunch."
To ask "How is your lunch?" in Polish, you would say "Jak ci smakuje lunch?"
In Cantonese, you say "lunch" as 午餐 (ng5 caan1).
To say "had your lunch" in Tamil, you can say "உணவு சாப்பிட்டீர்களா?" (uṇavu sāppiṭṭīrkaḷā?).
'time for lunch' is in Dutch 'tijd voor de lunch'
because its that time of the day
dinner time Well if you were having breakfeat and lunch you could say brunch but just lunch i guess you could say mid day meal sorry hope i was of much help!!:)
You can, but it is not idiomatic English. If you mean that people worked straight through their lunch time, use No one took lunch
You would say "Kei te waikīkī te waiparoro" in Maori to mean "It is time for lunch."
You can, but it is not idiomatic English. If you mean that people worked straight through their lunch time, use No one took lunch
Quid sit tempus prandium,
C'est l'heure de déjeuner.
You say "had lunch"
ITS A PALINDROME
Have a lunch.
To ask "How is your lunch?" in Polish, you would say "Jak ci smakuje lunch?"