European dinner style

Dinner is the name of the main meal of the day. Depending upon region and/or social class, it may be the second or third meal of the day. Originally, it referred to the first meal of the day, eaten about noon, and is still occasionally used in this fashion if it refers to a large or main meal.

Originally, dinner referred to the first meal of a two-meal day, a heavy meal occurring about noon, which broke the night’s fast in the new day. The word is from the Old French (ca 1300) disner, meaning “breakfast”, from the stem of Gallo-Romance desjunare (“to break one’s fast”), from Latin dis- (“undo”) + Late Latin jejunare  (“to fast”), from Latin jejunus (“fasting, hungry”). Eventually, the term shifted to referring to the heavy main meal of the day, even if it had been preceded by a breakfast meal. The (lighter) meal following dinner has traditionally been referred to as supper.

In some usages, the term dinner has continued to refer to the largest meal of the day, even when this meal is eaten at the end of the day and is preceded by two other meals. In this terminology, the preceding meals are usually referred to as breakfast and lunch. However, even in systems in which dinner is the meal usually eaten at the end of the day, an individual dinner may still refer to a main or more sophisticated meal at any time in the day, such as a banquet, feast, or a special meal eaten on a Sunday.

european dining ware is stylish and elegant. it uses stainless steel fireplace accessories so you don’t have to worry about rust. you can find various products such like blomus stainless steel fireplace, blomus stainless steel accessories, or Blomus Stainless Steel Round Hot Plate.

Rust is a general term for a series of iron oxides. Colloquially, the term is applied to red oxides, formed by the reaction of iron and oxygen in the presence of water or air moisture. Yet, there are also other forms of rust, such as the result of the reaction of iron and chlorine  in an environment deprived of oxygen, such as rebar used in underwater concrete pillars, which generates green rust. Several forms of rust are distinguishable visually and by spectroscopy, and form under different circumstances.  Rust consists of hydrated iron(III) oxides Fe2O3·nH2O and iron(III) oxide-hydroxide (FeO(OH), Fe(OH)3). Given sufficient time, oxygen, and water, any iron mass eventually converts entirely to rust and disintegrates. Surface rust provides no protection to the underlying iron unlike the formation of patina on copper surfaces.

Rusting is the common term for corrosion of iron and its alloys, such as steel. Metals undergo equivalent corrosion, but the resulting oxides are not commonly called rust.