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Meal Miːl Time Eat Lunch Main Square I

Word meal
WordType (noun)
Phonetic BrE / miːl / NAmE / miːl /
Example
  • try not to eat between meals.
  • lunch is his main meal of the day.
  • to go out for a meal (= to go to a restaurant to have a meal)
  • what time would you like your evening meal?
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Content

meal

(noun)BrE / miːl / NAmE / miːl /
  1. an occasion when people sit down to eat food, especially breakfast, lunch or dinner
    • Try not to eat between meals.
    • Lunch is his main meal of the day.
    • to go out for a meal (= to go to a restaurant to have a meal)
    • What time would you like your evening meal?
    • a cream tea.
    • What time do the kids have their tea?
  2. the food that is eaten at a meal
    • Enjoy your meal.
    • a three-course meal
  3. grain that has been crushed to produce a powder, used as food for animals and for making flour
    • See related entries: Carbohydrates
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/topic/carbohydrates/meal_1
  4. to spend a lot of time, energy, etc. doing something in a way that other people think is unnecessary and/or annoying
    • Why do you have to make such a meal of everything?
  5. a good, satisfying meal
    • He looks as though he hasn't had a square meal for weeks.

    Extra Examples

    • Hot meals are not available after 10 o’clock.
    • I always want to go to sleep after a heavy meal.
    • I’m so busy I have to snatch meals when I can.
    • Let’s go out for a meal.
    • She hadn’t had a square meal for days.
    • She has very little time to prepare home-cooked meals.
    • Thanks for a delicious meal.
    • That night he made her favourite/favorite meal.
    • The bar serves light meals.
    • The family was always noisy at meal times.
    • We’re going out for a meal.
    • When do you have your main meal of the day?
    • a meagre meal of bread and cheese
    • He looks like he hasn’t had a square meal for days.
    • She took me out for a slap-up meal.
    • They gave us a three-course meal.

    Word Origin

    • noun senses 1 to 2 Old English mǣl (also in the sense ‘measure’, surviving in words such as piecemeal ‘measure taken at one time’), of Germanic origin. The early sense of meal involved a notion of “fixed time”; compare with Dutch maal ‘meal, (portion of) time’ and German Mal ‘time’, Mahl ‘meal’, from an Indo-European root meaning ‘to measure’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Tags: m

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