1, breakfast
English? ['Breckoff? St] beautiful? ['Breckoff? st]? ?
Noun (short for noun)? Breakfast.
Verb (short for verb)? Eat breakfast; Have breakfast.
For what? Breakfast? They? Had it? Fuck? Bread? And then what? Tea. ?
They have bread and tea without butter for breakfast.
2. Lunch
English? 【l? nt? ] beautiful? 【l? nt? ]? ?
Noun (short for noun)? Lunch.
Verb (short for verb)? Eat (lunch); Provide (lunch).
Really? Isn't it? Not yet? Lunch? we? Went? Where to? That? Tea? A bar? For what? Ham? Sandwiches. ?
We didn't have lunch, so we went to the snack bar and bought a ham sandwich.
3. Dinner
English [? d? n? (r)]? Beauty [? d? n? ] ?
Dinner; Banquet; Dinner, dinner
we? Went? Where to? Dinner? That? Follow? Monday? At night?
The following Monday night, we went to eat together.
Extended data:
Take (someone's)? Lunch or for someone? When lunch is used with the preposition to, it doesn't mean "have lunch", but means "take lunch somewhere to eat".
Lunch can be used in formal occasions, meaning "lunch" and "luncheon". Often used with the verb give, equivalent to lunch.
Lunch can sometimes be used as an attribute in sentences.
When lunch is used as a noun, it means "lunch" When it is converted into a verb, it means "eat lunch, serve lunch". It means that two or more people have lunch together, or they can eat alone. The explanation of "providing lunch" is often related to whether lunch is rich or not.
Lunch can be used as a transitive verb, which is often interpreted as "providing lunch" with people as the object; It can also be used as an intransitive verb, often with adverbs such as in, out and off.