English, asked by sudan56, 18 days ago

have some biscuit and tea

Answers

Answered by rhacker312021
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Char

From the original Chinese character cha 茶 – see my post on Chinese loanwords.

For ex: Let’s sit down and have and cup of char.

Rosy Lee

This comes from cockney rhyming slang – a cup of Rosy Lee – tea.

For ex: Fancy a cup of Rosy?

A builders brew

Builders on construction sites brew up tea to drink on their tea breaks and they seem to like it strong, milky and with two sugars. So builders brew has come to refer to tea served this way.

For ex: How do you take your tea? Builders tea is fine for me.

Meals – tea can also refer to meals, which can be a bit confusing for the outsider.

Tea – evening meal (also referred to as supper or dinner)

Afternoon tea – sandwiches, cake and copious cups of tea

High tea – early evening meal with savoury food and some cakes, served with tea

Cream tea – cream cakes served with cups of tea

Biscuits

The British rank among the top five tea-drinking countries in the world, around 2.74kg per person per year and what goes down well with a cuppa but a biscuit. A little search for figures on the web revealed that on average Brits consume a colossal 8kgs of biscuits per person per year.

dunkingbiscuit

 

We don’t just eat the biscuits; we dunk them in our tea. We like them to be infused with our national drink and just when they look like they will fall into the tea we hoover them into our mouths. I even found a biscuit appreciation society where they provide wonderful instructions in the art of dunking.

Personally, I believe the best cup of tea is the one made for you by someone else!

Enjoy your cuppas!

Answered by augustianamjith
0

Answer:

o ya biscuit is a good thing in tea

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