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supper

Parf of speech: Noun, OED Year: 1300, OED Evaluation: N/A

The last meal of the day; (contextually) the time at which this is eaten, supper time. Also: the food eaten at such a meal. Often without article, demonstrative, possessive, or other modifier.

ExampleMeaning
When all that was done, we had- one of my aunt's gave us a television. The screen on the television wasn't bigger than that ... But you had to have your supper eat before you turned the television on or if you were watching television it was shut off while supper was going on.
The last meal of the day.
... he invited somebody in for dinner one time and his wife was mad because she didn't know what to feed him. All that was in the house was a bag of rolled oats, Mum said that's what was given to him for- for supper that night.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
... cellar with the furnace in it and you'd go down and put your pickles in there and-such. So you'd be called to- asked to- to go down for supper, to pick up something there- here, there, whatever. Um, but the tornadoes- yeah, we would go- go down to whose-ever basement- in this case we'd go to, ah, wait for the winds to die out and-that.
The last meal of the day.
... you'd go out to play, we were all encouraged to play outside as my dad- my mom used to commonly say, "I think you need fresh air," which meant that we were going to get fresh air every single day. (laughs) But they- she had to drag us in at supper, drag us in. It was never a day that we didn't want to be out, whether it was snowing, making, um, igloos or-whatever, um, climbing trees in all the neighbours yards were- they were very accommodating.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Speaker: Oh, that was ideal because the- usually the ladies tried to see how much a young lad could eat. Interviewer: (laughs) So it was her responsibility if it was on the- her farm? To- Speaker: Yeah, whoever's farm it was then they'd have dinner and they they'd have supper. Interviewer: So dinner was- Interviewer 2: Yeah Interviewer: At noon time? Speaker: Yeah, yeah that was noon time, yeah.
The last meal of the day.
Interviewer: Yeah, and so what kind of meals and kind of things would you, ah- Interviewer 2: Yeah, tell us about those meals. Speaker: Oh, there would be roast pork, roast chicken- Interviewer: Wow. Speaker: Turkey- that was just, ah, bigger than a- any, ah, community supper. Like there was- you couldn't have ate everything that was there.
The last meal of the day.
Speaker: But it was still- like, every hundred acres had a farm. Interviewer: Mm-hm. Speaker: But there wasn't, you know, and- but most of them you'd thrash for a whole day and some of the bigger ones you'd actually have supper. And then there'd be maybe four or five loads of- wagon loads waiting so as soon as supper was over, then you'd go back out and pitch those off into the mill and that way then (inc) time to, ah, tear the mill down.
The last meal of the day.
Speaker: Those rations were big, like there'd be (inc) tables twice the length of this one or more and there'd be like fifteen-sixteen people there to feed for dinner. Interviewer: Wow. That's amazing, yes. Speaker: And then the same, supper time it would be- do the same thing all over again.
The last meal of the day.
Interviewer: Now once you got a couple pike or two, what would you do with them? Speaker: Oh, I'd bring them home and clean them and mother cook 'them up for supper. You-know, keep them for a day or so and we'd have fish for two days in a row. (laughs)
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Speaker: New Year's was a big time. We seem to all go to a- an aunt of my mother's and we had greasy goose and duck for (laughs) supper. Lot's of food- Interviewer: Was that a tradition? Speaker: Yes it was. Interviewer: A wild duck? Speaker: Ah, no, oh no, raised- raised ducks.
The last meal of the day.
When she was there because we got her- we- we had our own food at supper and- and we came home at noon so then she was gone, she went to Ottawa after that and I boarded with ah, same family for three years, I think Wallace family and then I boarded with another English lady and- what on earth was her name?
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
).Well, on a Sunday- well, especially at your place, people would always come to visit on Sunday, or we'd all go there for a Sunday dinner, eh? And at that time, it was breakfast, dinner and supper. Because the women mostly stayed at home, they didn't work out, and ah, you had your big meal at noon, because when you farmed, you were hungry by noon, eh? And then supper would just be leftovers or home-made soup or-something I-guess, eh?
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
So he was telling me this one day and I said "Would you fix ours up like that." And he said "Sure, I'll stop over some night after supper." So he had all the parts, he come over and in about an hour we had her working. And it was- it wasn't so bad. There were only about fifty pounds instead of seventy or-so.
The last meal of the day.
But, but I remember they were really thick back in my grandfather's time. I remember when he was saying they were thrashing or-something one time. They had a bunch of men in there anyways, and they were in eating dinner or supper. And he said there were about a dozen or fifteen of them, and that there's ah still- well no they took the fence row out when the- my son rented it.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Cousins, yeah, yeah. We- we used to consider an all day drive then like you-know you were up early in the morning and had a picnic on the way (laughs) you got there in time for supper (laughs).
The last meal of the day.
We'd always get- Saturday in the winter, we always had fresh white fish for supper. That was sort of a- an old standby in the winter. It was a- 'cause there was a- a Mister-Handy-Store in town, you could always buy white-fish and in there.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Interviewer: Ah, did the fish come home f-- for supper then? Speaker: Yeah, if we got some, they'd come home for supper. But I could remember times you-know when we're fishing that- like the guy that went with me, he knew where the fish were apparently. We caught about dozen there one time in about ten minutes.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Speaker: And everybody worked together and so the mot-- then and the women had to make dinner then and supper for all the men and there'd be like twelve, fifteen men every time- Speaker 2: Three day- it might take three days at each farm to thresh it and it be six wagons.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Speaker: Well we had a neighbour, you know where Mississipi Valley is there? Interviewer: Yes, exactly yes. Speaker: There was a Vick-Fargo who lived there, he was a bachelor, and we'd have him down for supper once in a while. He lived by himself. He was something to talk to.
The last meal of the day.
ExampleMeaning
Well the one comes here in the morning, goes to school, and comes back after school 'til supper time, then he goes home, eh?
The last meal of the day.