Doesn't a 'takeaway' just mean a 'to-go' order on the east side of the Atlantic? Or is our common language dividing us again? Do you mean "Why do people order 'to-go' instead of eating in the restaurant?"? There could be many reasons. Your kids won't behave in a restaurant, but you want to eat their food. You feel uncomfortable eating alone in public. You don't want to eat right now, but this is a more convenient time to stop at the restaurant. You are taking a meal to a shut-in.
its 15.00
It is commonly called a 'takeaway or takeaways' - adding shop is not needed.
yes
korean
Blood Sweat and Takeaways - 2010 was released on: USA: 4 January 2010
TK is the amount of takeaways by a player. Takeaways are pretty much the hockey equivalent to steals in basketball.
As an increasingly cosmopolitan population, a much wider variety of food is eaten. Indian restaurants and takeaways are everywhere, Thai food is increasingly popular, and of course there are the usual KFC, McDonalds, Burger King, Subway outlets. There are, naturally many traditional Fish-and-Chip shops and Chinese is still a frequent sight.
Each year Britain chomps its way through around 300,000,000 takeaways. (Taken from a BBC report done in 2007)
panda express
they prefer takeaways to making food..
40
Mc donalds, KFC, pizza hut....