In Italy, in addition to three meals- breakfast (breakfast), Lunch (Lunch) and Senna (dinner) – there is a fourth time between lunch and dinner called snack.
Like most words in Italian, snack from late Latin worth (worth), literally “what you deserve”.
/I·Forge·Da/
Lunch is a feminine noun with the following definite and indefinite articles:
snack
afternoon snack
snack
afternoon snack
snack
afternoon snack
some snacks
(some) afternoon snack
Although every region and family is different, snack Often thought of as a snack for kids after school to keep them going until dinner time (which is often very late in Italy).
One snack Almost always made with ingredients commonly used at home.For example, my former Au Pair children in Turin always have Biscotti (biscuit), self made tota (cake) or a lamp sandwich (sandwich) jam or peanut butter. Adults can have snack Same thing, although it’s not that common.
to make (of) snacks This is how you say “eat an afternoon snack” in Italian.
Kids, stop playing, come and have a snack!
Kids, stop playing and come to lunch!
Due to the frenetic pace of today’s society, Italian parents often want to buy snack (prepackaged cakes sold as children’s snacks) buy from the supermarket instead of preparing one snack Start from zero every day.the word snack Literally “small snack” (snack + small suffix – There).
A popular idiom in Italy is snack like cabbage (ignite. like melenda’s cabbage). It is used to describe someone or something that does not belong, fit or match. E.g:
According to Italians, a cappuccino for lunch is like a cabbage for a snack.
According to Italians, having a cappuccino with lunch is totally inappropriate.