Tiffin is an
Indian English
Indian English (IE) is a group of English dialects spoken in the republic of India and among the Indian diaspora. English is used by the Indian government for communication, along with Hindi, as enshrined in the Constitution of India. E ...
word for a type of meal. It refers to a light breakfast or a light tea-time meal at about 3 p.m., consisting of typical tea-time foods.
In certain parts of India, it can also refer to the midday
luncheon or, in some regions of the
Indian subcontinent, a between-meal
snack
A snack is a small portion of food generally eaten between meals. Snacks come in a variety of forms including packaged snack foods and other processed foods, as well as items made from fresh ingredients at home.
Traditionally, snacks are p ...
. When used in place of the word "lunch", however, it does not necessarily mean a light meal.
Etymology
In the
British Raj, tiffin was used to denote the British custom of
afternoon tea that had been supplanted by the Indian practice of having a light meal at that hour. It is derived from "tiffing", an English colloquial term meaning to take a little drink. By 1867 it had become naturalised among
Anglo-Indians in northern British India to mean luncheon.
[cites H. Wedgwood (1862) "''Tiffin'', now naturalised among Anglo-Indians in the sense of luncheon, is the North country tiffing (properly sipping)". See also .]
Current usage
In
South India and in Nepal, tiffin is generally a snack between meals:
dosa
Dosa may refer to:
People
* Bogoljub Mitić Đoša, Serbian actor
* Csaba Dosa (born 1951), Romanian athlete
* Dosa ben Harkinas
* Dosa ben Saadia (935 - 1018), Talmudic scholar and philosopher
* Dosa or Dossa Júnior
* Edward Dosa-Wea Neufville ...
s,
idlis,
vada
Vada or Vayda may refer to:
People
*Gunnar Vada (1927–2018), Norwegian politician
*Vada Nobles, American record producer
*Vada Pinson (1938–1995), American baseball player
*Vada Sultenfuss, fictional character in the 1991 film ''My Girl''
* ...
s etc. In other parts of India, such as
Mumbai, the word mostly refers to a
packed lunch of some sort. In Mumbai, it is often delivered to them by
dabbawalas, sometimes known as ''tiffin wallahs'', who use a complex system to get thousands of
tiffin carriers to their destinations. In most of India, a school-going child's lunch box is fondly called a tiffin box.
When used in place of the word "lunch", tiffin often consists of rice,
lentils,
curry, vegetables,
chapatis or "spicy meats". In addition, the
lunch boxes are themselves called
tiffin carriers, tiffin-boxes or just tiffins.
See also
* ''
Bento''
* ''
Dosirak''
*
Lunchbox
A lunch box (alt. spelling lunchbox) refers to a hand-held container used to transport food, usually to work or to school. It is commonly made of metal or plastic, is reasonably airtight and often has a handle for carrying.
In the United ...
*
Tiffin carrier
*
Tiffin (confectionery)
Tiffin is a form of cake-like confection composed of crushed biscuits (most commonly digestive biscuits), sugar, syrup, raisins, cherries and cocoa powder, often covered with a layer of melted striped chocolate. Unlike regular cakes, Tiffin do ...
Notes
References
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*{{Citation , last=Wedgwood , first=H. , year=1872 , title=A Dictionary of English Etymology , edition=second, pag
682}
Meals
Indian cuisine
Indian English idioms
Indian slang