English, asked by krish15julykt, 1 month ago

They has not brought their lunchboxes today.​

Answers

Answered by llRomeoll
2

Explanation:

I brought my lunch (today).” Everything else is understood. That you brought it from home, and at whatever time you came in, probably morning, is all implied in this sentence. Many people will add “today,” but depending on how the question was asked, you may or may not need this additional information. If someone asks “What are you doing for lunch today?” then there is no need to repeat the word “today” in your answer. If someone simply asks “What are you doing for lunch?” it makes more sense to answer “I brought my lunch today.” If someone were to ask “What are you doing for lunch this week?” you could answer this way: “Today, I brought my lunch,” adding whatever is relevant “I don’t know what I’m doing tomorrow,” or “and I’ll probably bring it the rest of the week too,” or “I’m having a working lunch at [restaurant] tomorrow.”

A slang phrase that you commonly hear in the US, at least in the northern US, is this:

“I’m brown-bagging it today.” This is a reference to the plain brown paper bags that many school children use to bring lunches from home to school. You do not literally have to bring your lunch in a brown paper bag to use this phrase. You can bring it in a reusable, insulated lunch bag. You can even buy your drink at work to go with it, or a candy bar. This is still a valid expression, as long as you brought the majority of your food from home. This means exactly the same thing as “I brought my lunch from home today,” and you can add other relevant things as described in the paragraph above. NOTE: this phrase is US-specific. If you are in the UK or Australia, or even Canada, I don’t know that this phrase would be understood. However, in the US, it is extremely common.

Answered by ravinachoudhary657
0

Explanation:

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