Breakfast vs Bible - What's the difference?
breakfast | bible |
The first meal of the day, usually eaten in the morning.
* 1591 , Shakespeare, Henry VI, part 2 , act 1:
* {{quote-book, year=1922, author=
, title=The Cuckoo in the Nest
, chapter=1 (by extension) A meal consisting of food normally eaten in the morning, which may typically include eggs, sausages, toast, bacon, etc.
A meal after fasting, or food in general.
* Dryden
To eat the morning meal.
* He breakfasted on pizza and Coke.
* Prior
To serve breakfast to.
*
A comprehensive manual that describes something. (e.g., handyman’s bible).
* 1995 , Gary Wolf, "The Curse of Xanadu",
(nautical) A holystone.
Collection of sacred writing of the Christian religion
As nouns the difference between breakfast and bible
is that breakfast is the first meal of the day, usually eaten in the morning while bible is a specific version, edition, translation, or copy of one of the above-mentioned texts.As a verb breakfast
is to eat the morning meal.As a proper noun bible is
the main religious text in christianity or bible can be .breakfast
English
(wikipedia breakfast) , bacon, fried mushrooms and tomatoes, scrambled eggs and toast at a restaurant in (Singapore). These foods are eaten for breakfast in many countries.Noun
(en noun)- You should put more protein in her breakfast so she will grow.
- a sorry breakfast for my lord protector
citation, passage=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.}}
- We serve breakfast all day.
- The wolves will get a breakfast by my death.
Derived terms
* breakfast of champions * champagne breakfast * continental breakfast * deskfast * English breakfast * wedding breakfastSee also
* brunch * jentacularVerb
(en verb)- First, sir, I read, and then I breakfast .
Synonyms
* break one's fastAnagrams
* 1000 English basic wordsbible
English
(wikipedia bible)Noun
(en noun)Wired Magazine
- Computer Lib was written as a popular primer, but its most profound effect was on computer programmers, who needed little persuasion about the value of computers. Its tone – energetic, optimistic, inexhaustible, confused – matched theirs exactly. Having set out to appeal to the general public, Nelson managed to publish an insider's bible and highly intimate guide to hacker culture.
