well, they could have ate potatoes but im not sure. actually,i guessed. so you might have to check on that somewhere else. maybe mashed potatoes
chicken and rice
The correct way to say this would be "Mark HAD lunch." This means he already ate it. You could also say "Mark WILL HAVE lunch," meaning sometime in the future. Another correct sentence would be "Mark HAS lunch." This means that he is in possession of lunch but has not eaten it yet.
food
maybe it was right after lunch and kids are prone to getting hiccups after lunch
I don't know. To me, it would actually be safer to use cell phones at lunch and it makes no sense since the children aren't doing any work. Just go in the bathroom during lunch.
it depends on what they have in them and where they got them from because if they had chickens or pigs or lived on a farm it would be vurtiuatlly free but if they lived in a city then they would have been a lot
Typically breakfast is eaten between the hours of 6 and 9 am, lunch is eaten between noon and 2 p.m. and dinner is enjoyed between the hours of 5 p.m. and 8 p.m.
because they would pick the most unhealthy meals and would make them fat.
You would get eaten mercilessly as a school lunch, an eating contest, or at a picnic. Or maybe I'll eat you for lunch. But wherever you are eaten,all tasty sandwiches go to the same place, you'll be chewed up, swallowed, digested in the small intestine and your nutrients absorbed. Water will be extracted in the large intestine, and any remains passed out as faeces.
Oatcake for Breakfast and Lunch, for Dinner the Children were served Potato Pies with Boiled Bacon. These were some of the meals the children would have received. They were promised Roast and lovely Vegetables each day, with Plum Pudding for Dessert. Unfortunately this wasn't the case and the children had eaten the food they least expected to have.
Le déjeuner is "the lunch"; "j'ai mangé" is I ate / I have eaten in French. However, while in English it is acceptable to say, "The lunch I ate...", in French you would need to say "Le déjeuner que j'ai mangé", i.e. "The lunch that I ate..."
For breakfast they would have eaten a small amount of bread with a cold meat or cheese For lunch it would be the same but in a larger quantity For dinner it would be stew or porridge made from oats