b3ta.com board
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Messageboard » Brits In Space » Message 6077826

[challenge entry] Tenuous at best I suppose...

From the Brits In Space challenge. See all 303 entries (closed)

(, Thu 29 Jun 2006, 19:13, archived)
# ?
edit: ahhhhhhhhhhhhhh

This word is still very much alive in its traditional heartland of India. Lunches are cooked at home by workers’ wives and then transported, often by train, perhaps 20 or 30 miles to their places of work by tiffin-wallahs, each three-tiered tiffin-carrier probably passing through several hands in a highly sophisticated and efficient cooperative process. (Another word for the lunchbox is dabba and those who deliver dabbas by bicycle on the final stage of their journeys to offices are often called dabbawallahs.)

Tiffin is a word that perhaps more than any other evokes British India. It entered the language at the very beginning of the nineteenth century, perhaps because the fashion for eating dinner mid-afternoon was giving way to a main meal taken later in the day, requiring a lighter midday meal and a name for it. Why the much older luncheon or lunch wasn’t used isn’t clear. Instead, the English in India borrowed tiffing, an old English dialect or slang word for taking a little drink or sip. (I forbear from suggesting that the habit among some sahibs of drinking their lunch had something to do with the popularity of the term.) The word has also long been used for any light meal taken during the day, except breakfast.
(, Thu 29 Jun 2006, 19:21, archived)
# failing all that, just watch "Carry on up the Khyber"
(, Thu 29 Jun 2006, 19:28, archived)
# or go to the tiffin Indan teahouse and restaurant in Leicester
which is very nice indeed
(, Thu 29 Jun 2006, 19:32, archived)
# bah, tiffin is served a half past four precisely,
ten past eight is time for cheese and port


*clicks regardless*
(, Thu 29 Jun 2006, 19:22, archived)
# Carry on Clicking Regardless
Shirley
(, Thu 29 Jun 2006, 19:31, archived)