breakfast
See also: break-fast and break fast
English
Etymology
From Middle English brekefast, brekefaste, equivalent to break + fast (literally, "to end the nightly fast"). Cognate with Dutch breekvasten (“breakfast”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈbɹɛkfəst/
Audio (US) (file) Audio (UK) (file) - (meal eaten after religious fasting): also IPA(key): /ˈbɹeɪkˌfæst/
Audio (file)
Noun
breakfast (countable and uncountable, plural breakfasts)
- The first meal of the day, usually eaten in the morning.
- You should put more protein in her breakfast so she will grow.
- 1591, Shakespeare, Henry VI, part 2, act 1:
- a sorry breakfast for my lord protector
- 1922, Ben Travers, chapter 1, in The Cuckoo in the Nest:
- Peter, after the manner of man at the breakfast table, had allowed half his kedgeree to get cold and was sniggering over a letter. Sophia looked at him sharply. The only letter she had received was from her mother. Sophia's mother was not a humourist.
- (by extension) A meal consisting of food normally eaten in the morning, which may typically include eggs, sausages, toast, bacon, etc.
- We serve breakfast all day.
- The celebratory meal served after a wedding (and occasionally after other solemnities e.g. a funeral).
- (largely obsolete outside religion) A meal eaten after a period of (now often religious) fasting.
- (Can we date this quote?) Dryden, 1847
- The wolves will get a breakfast by my death.
- (Can we date this quote?) Dryden, 1847
Usage notes
- In the sense "meal eaten after a period of (now often religious) fasting", the word is more often spelled break-fast or break fast; it is also often pronounced differently.
Derived terms
Terms derived from the noun "breakfast"
- breakfast of champions
- champagne breakfast
နံနက်စာ====Translations====
first meal of the day
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See also
Verb
breakfast (third-person singular simple present breakfasts, present participle breakfasting, simple past and past participle breakfasted)
- (intransitive) To eat the morning meal.
- 1847, Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre, 1st edition, volume II, chapter I, page 12
- "Oh, he set off the moment he had breakfasted! […] "
- Prior
- First, sir, I read, and then I breakfast.
- 1847, Charlotte Brontë, Jane Eyre, 1st edition, volume II, chapter I, page 12
- (transitive) To serve breakfast to.
- 1987, Anne McCaffrey, The Lady: A Tale of Ireland, page 269:
- By seven-thirty she had breakfasted them, provided each with a packed lunch and Thermoses of coffee and tea
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Synonyms
Translations
to eat the morning meal
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Anagrams
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