English dining etiquette
In Britain, not all people eat four meals a day. Most British working people have neither the time nor the ability, and 91% of British people take lunch as their main meal. It is cooked by the hostess rather than the chef. Most families have three meals a day: breakfast, dinner (lunch), afternoon tea and dinner. Dinner is just Leng Cha.
In English conversation, "please" and "thank you" are very common, even at home. When parents and children eat at the same table, the father asks his son to bring the bottle of salt, soy sauce or other things on the table, and he also has to say, "Please bring me the salt." When the son brings what his father wants, the father must say "thank you". Between husband and wife, mother and daughter, etc. If a child asks his mother for a piece of bread at the dinner table and says, "Give me a piece of bread," the mother will answer him, "What, give me a piece of bread! ?” The child has to say again, "please give me a piece of bread." These life terms are very strict in Britain.