[eatBug : Lunch] cookie and coffee
[eatBug : Lunch] cookie and coffee
( https://steemit.com/food/@steamsteem/eatbug-lunch-cookie-and-coffe )
2018.05.19.Sat.16:41(utc+9), by steamsteem, English translation.
2018.05.19.Sat.15:51(utc+9), by steamsteem, originally in Korean.
https://steemit.com/kr/@steamsteem/6q13nk
I have not written a [eatBug] post this week.
Maybe my head was full of other stuff, in vain.
Today's [eatBug] post is about
my brief lunch at 2018.05.14.Mon.12:00(utc+9)
Maybe I had little breakfast.
I felt a little hunger early, and looked for something to eat as lunch.
I found a pack of cooke named 'garlic baguette'
and a cup of take-out coffee maybe from the day before.
Decided them as today (last Monday) 's lunch.
The photo below is the lunch-time item to watch as usual.
In some channel, I found a movie which attracted me.
The movie name is 'If cats disappear in the world ?' ??? (not correct name).
I think it's not bad.
When I have a chance to see from the start, I will (in the free channel).
The photo below is unboxing photo.
I feel like that I am writing a kind of a product review, but it is not.
As usual,
my last photo of [eatBug] is
the mission-cleared-evidence photo as a scavenger.
Here is a voting quiz.
[Voting Quiz 1]
What is the free channel where I am watching the movie ?
As usual,
If you write correct channel name,
the 1st correct answer will get my vote over $1
at my own judgement with no protest acceptable condition.
( I guess that it is practically impossible for the non-Koreans get the exact answer.
Sorry for it. So here I make another voting quiz.)
This voting quiz will be closed
as soon as the original Korean version get the correct answer,
since this English version quiz is for non-Koreans generally.
If some Koreans write the correct answer here first, then I will vote it.
[Voting Quiz 2]
This is only for non-Koreans.
If you can write the main language of the movie above,
the 1st correct answer will get my vote over $1
at my own judgement with no protest acceptable condition.
I think that is an english movie
Thank you for your answer, but it is not.
Sir, I think you should give creative clues in your contest
I guess that
if some people are eager to win the prize under the condition that they are not banned from major search engines,
...
--
Quiz 1 is written as 'practically impossible for non-user of the same channel', so Quiz 2 is added only for non-Koreans.
According to my palet - I think this would go great with a Vienna lager.
@beercraft, I like beer too.
Usually we are indonesian as food in the morning. A cup of coffee and some slices of bread. Itupun not as the main menu of breakfast.
Different place is also different system. If I personally Eat a few pieces of biscuit and a cup of coffee is not an effect to keep lunch. Hehehe.
@ojaatjeh, thank you for your information on Indonesian meal.
Many Koreans also may think that the above lunch is short for them.
I guess that you are young, below 45 yo, since young people need more food compared with old people.
The guesses about my age are perfect. Now I am under 45 years old, and exactly 36 years. And yes, to sustain my life as a worker, I need more food intake my body needs.
This talk attached to this comment is only for my English Q&A teacher @jamieinthedark , not for others.
But anyone's any comments are welcome only if they handle English expression and culture lessons.
Anyone's any comments are not treated as un-invited, but I write this comment just not to confuse others about what is happening here.
Is the photo above cookie or other name ?
biscuit, bread, baguette or else ??
I'd call them fried baguette pieces. Definitely not cookies, biscuits or bread.
fried baguette pieces.
great.
Would you please kindly tell the differences of them ?
It's a more complicated question than you'd imagine, and it can be confusing.
In American English, biscuits are leavened and may be savory or slightly sweet. The term 'leavened' means that baking soda or yeast is used. Think of KFC biscuits.
However, those biscuits look and feel very much like scones. So in British English, they would be scones, not biscuits. In Britain, all kinds of round, flat, and sweet baked goods are called biscuits. Think of digestive biscuits. They are originally from Scotland, in Britain. The term 'cookie' is not very often used in Britain.
In North America, on the other hand, nearly all of the sweet, rounded and flat baked goods are called cookies. Think of chocolate chip cookies.
To sum up:
American biscuits=British scones
British biscuits=American cookies
In America, the word 'cookie' is very generally applied.
In Britain, the word 'biscuit' is used more often.
You'll have to judge case by case, but these are the general rules.
Bread is leavened and plain (and maybe a little savory), although it can have sweet ingredients(raisins or chestnuts, for example). It's still basically savory, though only slightly so, in most cases.
So many things to study here.
It will take me some time to study this.
I guess that very delicate one.
Thank you very much for your good and kind lessons, @jamieinthedark .
I will, some time later in the day!
and
is an idiom in itself, so it's clearer to write
great lesson.
These lessons are difficult to learn from just English-self-studying.
--
What is the meaning of the idiom 'tell the differences' ?
Does it mean 'know the differences' ?
In my old English-Korean dictionary, I can't see it.
yes, it means to recognize the differences. The word 'tell' has that meaning, to be precise. Not just with 'differences'.
Maybe if you looked up the word 'tell' you might find it as a secondary meaning.