Ientaculum.
Breakfast=lentaculum Lunch=prandium Dinner=cena Dessert=bellaria
This could be either a statement or a question, depending on the tone of voice. As a result, there are two possible translations:Question: Did you already eat breakfast?Statement: You already ate breakfast.
Breakfast = petit déjeuner
breakfast = el desayuno
It is always breakfast,lunch,tea and after these comes dinner. Tea comes around 4 pm.
Ientaculum.
Ientaculum.
Edo ientaculum.
Breakfast=lentaculum Lunch=prandium Dinner=cena Dessert=bellaria
The math club, the Latin club, and the physics club.
Oh, dude, you wanna impress your kid with some Latin, huh? Alright, so to say "hello son" in Latin, you'd say "Salve, fili." Just imagine your kid's face when you drop that on them at breakfast. Like, they'll be so confused, it'll be hilarious.
"Love Before Breakfast" (1936) "Married Before Breakfast" (1937) "Breakfast for Two" (1937) "Kisses for Breakfast" (1941) "Breakfast at Tiffany's" (1961) "The Breakfast Club" (1985)
It is "bed and breakfast"
Umbrella is the only word on the list - which includes "breakfast", "papyrus" and "umbrage" - to come into English by way of Italian.Specifically, the English word breakfast comes from the seventeenth-century notion of "breaking fast, putting an end" to overnight fasting by having a morning meal. The English word papyrus comes from the Greek papyros by way of the Latin papyrus. The noun umbrage comes from Latin umbraticum ("of or pertaining to shade", from umbra ["shade, shadow"] by way of the Middle French ombrage for "shade, shadow". The noun umbrella comes from the Latin umbella for "parasol, sunshade" by way of the Late Latin umbrella and the subsequent Italian ombrello.
Breakfast
Example of breakfast as the direct object:I ate breakfast this morning.He cooked breakfast for the kids.They served breakfast by the pool.That was a good breakfast.
Breakfast and lunch were . . . "