midday meal

  • 11Mid-day Meal Scheme — The Mid day Meal Scheme is the popular name for school meal programme in India. It involves provision of lunch free of cost to school children on all working days. The key objectives of the programme are: protecting children from classroom hunger …

    Wikipedia

  • 12Tea (meal) — This article is about meals referred to as tea . For the beverage, see tea. Part of a series on Meals …

    Wikipedia

  • 13Siesta — This article is about the short nap. For other uses, see Siesta (disambiguation). A painting of a young woman taking a siesta. (The hammock, Gustave Courbet (1844).) A siesta (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈsjesta]) is a short nap taken in the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 14Fast — • Abstinence from food or drink Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Fast     Fast     † Catholic …

    Catholic encyclopedia

  • 15Luncheon — Luncheon, commonly abbreviated to lunch, is a midday meal. [http://www.etymonline.com/index.php?search=lunch searchmode=none Online Etymology Dictionary] ] In English speaking countries during the eighteenth century what was originally called… …

    Wikipedia

  • 16South Indian cuisine — This article is part of the series …

    Wikipedia

  • 17meals — Americans and British people generally eat three meals a day though the names vary according to people’s lifestyles and where they live.   The first meal of the day is breakfast. The traditional full English breakfast served in many British… …

    Universalium

  • 18dinner */*/*/ — UK [ˈdɪnə(r)] / US [ˈdɪnər] noun Word forms dinner : singular dinner plural dinners [countable/uncountable] the main meal of the day, eaten in the evening or at midday. A more usual word for a midday meal is lunch. An early evening meal is… …

    English dictionary

  • 19Радханатх Свами — В Википедии есть статьи о других людях с такой фамилией, см. Славин. Радханатх Свами Radhanath Swami …

    Википедия

  • 20noon — (n.) mid 12c., non midday, 12 o clock p.m., midday meal, from O.E. non 3 o clock p.m., the ninth hour, also the canonical hour of nones, from L. nona hora ninth hour of daylight, by Roman reckoning about 3 p.m., from nona, fem. singular of nonus… …

    Etymology dictionary