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Afternoon. Means afternoon
Snacks are a modern invention. People didn't eat all the time in the 1800's. They had a big breakfast, a smaller lunch, afternoon tea, and dinner.
The duration of This Afternoon is 3600.0 seconds.
Besides breakfast, lunch and dinner there was late morning broth and afternoon tea.
Out of the Afternoon was created in 1962-05.
Yes
they eat breakfast mostly in the morning and sometimes in the afternoon.
They are traditionally eaten with afternoon tea in places where they have afternoon tea. I like them for breakfast.
* With breakfast * Mid-morning and/or afternoon
French toast was eaten at any time, at breakfast, as a desert or an afternoon snack
If they want to, in New Orleans it is called 'pain perdu' - eaten at breakfast, as a desert or an afternoon snack
Yes, the phrase "this afternoon after breakfast" is a run-on sentence because it contains two independent clauses without proper punctuation or conjunction to connect them. To correct it, you could separate the clauses into two sentences or add a conjunction like "and" or "so."
No. But you should probably eat something to "get you going" and keep you energized. Oh, and breakfast can be eaten at any time, day or night.
Ukulele A ukelele. Actually Audrey plays a guitar
It is good to jog before breakfast, lunch, and dinner.
breakfast brunch lunch afternoon snacks dinner derserts cakes
No, because it is not a proper noun. In the same way, you would not capitalise the first letter of breakfast, lunch, or dinner. However, if the word "afternoon tea" was the name of a specific title for an event, eg Mad Hatter's Afternoon Tea, you may capitalise the first letters of each word.