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Answer for the clue "A midday meal ", 6 letters:
tiffin

Alternative clues for the word tiffin

Word definitions for tiffin in dictionaries

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
Tiffin is an Indian English word for a light midday meal ( luncheon ), When used in place of the word "lunch", it does not necessarily mean a light meal.

Gazetteer Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 18135 Housing Units (2000): 7862 Land area (2000): 6.494442 sq. miles (16.820526 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.141731 sq. miles (0.367082 sq. km) Total area (2000): 6.636173 sq. miles (17.187608 sq. km) FIPS code: 76778 Located within: ...

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
n. a midday meal [syn: lunch , luncheon , dejeuner ]

Usage examples of tiffin.

Mellish was nervously anxious to go straight to his Fumigatory, and talked at random until tiffin was over and His Excellency asked him to smoke.

The breakfast that was to make up for nine missed meals, not to mention odd tiffins that Mother had brought along, came in a half-kilo block, dense, solid and vacuum-packed in silver-coloured plastic that was covered with instructions in twelve languages.

The young dabbawalla skipped nimbly through the shadow-crowd, because he was used to such conditions, think, Spoono, picture, thirty-forty tiffins in a long wooden tray on your head, and when the local train stops you have maybe one minute to push on or off, and then running in the streets, flat out, yaar, with the trucks buses scooters cycles and what-all, one-two, one-two, lunch, lunch, the dabbas must get through, and in the monsoon running down the railway line when the train broke down, or waist-deep in water in some flooded street, and there were gangs, Salad baba, truly, organized gangs of dabba-stealers, it's a hungry city, baby, what to tell you, but we could handle them, we were everywhere, knew everything, what thieves could escape our eyes and ears, we never went to any policia, we looked after our own.

Alan Abercrombie, assistant professor of comparative mantics, sleek, blond, handsome, the lion of the tiffins.

On the grubby movie screen on which, earlier in the journey, the inflight inevitability of Walter Matthau had stumbled lugubriously into the aerial ubiquity of Goldie Hawn, there were shadows moving, projected by the nostalgia of the hostages, and the most sharply defined of them was this spindly adolescent, Ismail Najmuddin, mummy's angel in a Gandhi cap, running tiffins across the town.