Yes, me too, it's quinterbeck who would call this a thermos.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 1:36 pmA thermos to me is a type of vacuum flask. The reusable cup I showed only has one layer of metal. That's why the rubber grip is needed.

Yes, me too, it's quinterbeck who would call this a thermos.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Wed Jun 24, 2020 1:36 pmA thermos to me is a type of vacuum flask. The reusable cup I showed only has one layer of metal. That's why the rubber grip is needed.
The word "soup plate" exists in English as well: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/soup%20plate. Confusingly, however, I consider a "soup plate" a kind of shallow bowl rather than a kind of "deep plate" (scare quotes because I don't think it's a term I'd ever use; the defining feature of plates is that they're flat so it doesn't make sense to describe one as "deep").Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:49 amYes, I've got the impression that in English, every piece of tableware that has the right shape so that you can eat soup from it is called a "bowl". But in German, if something like that has an outer edge that looks like the outer edge of a plate, it's still seen as a type of "Teller" ("plate") - you would specify it by talking about a "tiefer Teller" ("deep plate") or a "Suppenteller" ("soup plate"). I wanted to be clear about English usage.
There are definitely three regular kinds of plates for me in German: "kleine Teller" aka "Frühstücksteller" aka "Kuchenteller" are small and flat. "Große Teller" aka "flache Teller" are large and flat. "Tiefe Teller" aka "Suppenteller' are large-ish and not flat. "Nudelteller" aka "Pastateller" exist, but are an irregular kind of plate, at least for me.Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:49 am Yes, I've got the impression that in English, every piece of tableware that has the right shape so that you can eat soup from it is called a "bowl". But in German, if something like that has an outer edge that looks like the outer edge of a plate, it's still seen as a type of "Teller" ("plate") - you would specify it by talking about a "tiefer Teller" ("deep plate") or a "Suppenteller" ("soup plate"). I wanted to be clear about English usage.
Here's what I'm thinking of:
tieferteller.jpg
Interesting. I've never heard of either of these things.Pabappa wrote: ↑Sat May 15, 2021 12:58 pmto me a pasta bowl can either be a bowl for eating out of, or a larger one from which the whole family takes their shares. my parents had a nice set of bowls just like that, and i took some of them with me to my apartment. i take spaghetti and break it into small pieces with my hands and then eat it with a spoon, and since i dont usually put much sauce on, i prefer to eat it from a plate rather than a bowl.
Oh, same thing in French. That's an assiette creuse or an assiette à soupe to me, definitely not un bol.Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:49 am Yes, I've got the impression that in English, every piece of tableware that has the right shape so that you can eat soup from it is called a "bowl". But in German, if something like that has an outer edge that looks like the outer edge of a plate, it's still seen as a type of "Teller" ("plate") - you would specify it by talking about a "tiefer Teller" ("deep plate") or a "Suppenteller" ("soup plate"). I wanted to be clear about English usage.
Here's what I'm thinking of:
tieferteller.jpg
Isn't un bol also something you would drink tea, coffee, or milk out of? Bowl in English for any of these seems odd to me. I think I'd say cup.Ares Land wrote: ↑Sat May 15, 2021 3:26 pmOh, same thing in French. That's an assiette creuse or an assiette à soupe to me, definitely not un bol.Raphael wrote: ↑Wed May 12, 2021 10:49 am Yes, I've got the impression that in English, every piece of tableware that has the right shape so that you can eat soup from it is called a "bowl". But in German, if something like that has an outer edge that looks like the outer edge of a plate, it's still seen as a type of "Teller" ("plate") - you would specify it by talking about a "tiefer Teller" ("deep plate") or a "Suppenteller" ("soup plate"). I wanted to be clear about English usage.
Here's what I'm thinking of:
tieferteller.jpg
a salad bowl (circular, shallow bowl usu. with rim), maybe a trencher (long, shallow bowl usu. without rim)
I had one of those growing up - we called it the soup mug
My mom sometimes dips bread (or used to dip bread) in her tiny glass of black coffee!
I think that's what most people use, yes. (I'm less sure this is genuinely what they want. I don't drink coffee or at least drink it very, very rarely, so I can't really speak for them).but for the morning caffeine overdose don't people in America prefer huge, tall cups, Starbucks-style?
I think you get those here as well.