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dinner

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Schwan's® Official Site
Delicious Time Saving Meals. Home Delivered Meals, 866-208-1540.
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Tudor Farmhouse Hotel
Next wine dinner scheduled for Fri 25th Sept 2009
www.tudorfarmhousehotel.co.uk
Dinner
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din⋅ner

[din-er]
–noun
1. the main meal of the day, eaten in the evening or at midday.
2. a formal meal in honor of some person or occasion.
3. table d'hôte.

Origin:
1250–1300; ME diner < OF disner (n. use of v.); see dine


din⋅ner⋅less, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Cite This Source Link To dinner
Schwan's® Official Site
Delicious Time Saving Meals. Home Delivered Meals, 866-208-1540.
Schwans.com
Tudor Farmhouse Hotel
Next wine dinner scheduled for Fri 25th Sept 2009
www.tudorfarmhousehotel.co.uk
din·ner   (dĭn'ər)   
n.  
    1. The chief meal of the day, eaten in the evening or at midday.

    2. A banquet or formal meal in honor of a person or event.

    3. The food prepared for either of these meals.

  1. A full-course meal served at a fixed price; table d'hôte.


[Middle English diner, morning meal, from Old French disner, diner, to dine, morning meal; see dine.]
Word History: Eating foods such as pizza and ice cream for breakfast may be justified etymologically. In Middle English dinner meant "breakfast," as did the Old French word disner, or diner, which was the source of our word. The Old French word came from the Vulgar Latin word *disiūnāre, meaning "to break one's fast; that is, to eat one's first meal," a notion also contained in our word breakfast. The Vulgar Latin word was derived from an earlier word, *disiēiūnāre, the Latin elements of which are dis-, denoting reversal, and iēiūnium, "fast." Middle English diner not only meant "breakfast" but, echoing usage of the Old French word diner, more commonly meant "the first big meal of the day, usually eaten between 9 A.M. and noon." Customs change, however, and over the years we have let the chief meal become the last meal of the day, by which time we have broken our fast more than once.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

dinner 
1297, from O.Fr. disner, originally "breakfast," later "lunch," noun use of infinitive disner (see dine). Always used in Eng. for the main meal of the day; shift from midday to evening began with the fashionable classes. Childish reduplication din-din is attested from 1905.
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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Dinner
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Dinner Made Easy Recipes
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