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Lunch box and vacuum bottle owned by Harry S. Truman A collection of lunch boxes for school students Insulated thermal bag with ice packs. A lunch box [1] [2] [3] (or lunchbox) [4] [5] [6] is 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 ...
The lunch boxes, also called dosirak or dosirak-tong (dosirak case), are typically plastic or thermo-steel containers with or without compartments or tiers. [2] Dosirak is often home-made, but is also sold in train stations, convenience stores, [3] [4] and some restaurants. Dosirak is derived from the Early Modern Korean word 도슭. [5]
"Time for tiffin: the history of India's lunch in a box". The Guardian; Hock, Kenny Teng Khoon (5 March 2020). "Tiffin carrier collector couple hoping to start their own museum". The Malaysian Reserve. Pictures by Bernama. Sunder, Kalpana (22 August 2021). "How tiffin went from British legacy to India's everyday lunch in a box".
The ultimate status symbol for a grade school kiddo, lunch boxes carried your Wonder Bread sandwich, provided a conversation starter with your buddy in the cafeteria about whether Superman or ...
In the United States, an informal meeting at work, over lunch, where everyone brings a packed lunch, is a brown-bag lunch or colloquially a "brown bag". One of the earliest references to this type of meal is found in the Bible, where it is said that the prophet Habakkuk, then in Judea, prepared oatmeal and pieces of bread in a basket to take as ...
Aladdin is a brand notable for its line of character lunchboxes including Hopalong Cassidy, Superman, Mickey Mouse and The Jetsons.Today, Aladdin continues to be a food and beverage products brand and is owned by Pacific Market International, LLC of Seattle, Washington and Aladdin continues to be a kerosene lamps and wicks products brand and is owned by Hattersley Aladdin Ltd of the United ...
Letterpress is a process of printing several identical copies that presses words and designs onto the page. The print may be inked or blind, but is typically done in a single color. Motifs or designs may be added as many letterpress machines use movable plates that must be hand-set.
The word luncheon (/ ˈ l ʌ n tʃ ən /) has a similarly uncertain origin according to the OED, being "related in some way" to lunch. It is possible that luncheon is an extension of lunch, as with punch to puncheon and trunch to truncheon. [3] Originally interchangeable with lunch, it is now used in especially formal circumstances. [2]