Marilyn, that is just too weird to me.....having pizza for tea??????? It does not compute in my world. What is syrup sponge?????? I love custard and think that it goes well with tea. How different our habits are too....more so than just the language. Is your tea more like our dinner? Do you have dinner after tea? What do you eat for dinner?
Curious minds just gotta know!
Ah, we call all meals differently even over here. I was brought up eating a cooked meal at lunch time - called dinnertime, and at school they were always school dinners. So, teatime was whatever we had 5.30pm - 6pm when my dad got home, usually sandwiches etc. We never called lunch 'lunch'. We did usually have a supper which was a snack.
Southerners and 'posh' people used the term lunch and the dinner in the evening - we were neither Southern or posh!
Nowadays, I do call lunch 'lunch' even if we have a cooked meal(though occasionally I will call a cooked lunch a dinner!), but still call tea 'tea', even if it is a cooked meal! I never call an evening meal a 'dinner' unless it is advertised as such - eg. WDW etc. I will say we are going out for a meal, not dinner! I never use the term having a 'dinner party'. I think it goes back to my more 'working class' roots!!
Do you get it?
So, pizza does as a lunch, tea or dinner, or even a supper.
Do you have Golden Syrup? It is refined sugar syrup - a little like maple syrup but not as strong tasting. You can make a steamed pudding with the syrup in the bottom of a basin, a sponge cake mixture on top, sealed with greaseproof paper tied with string and steamed for an hour or so. When turned out some of the syrup has soaked into the sponge and some is runny.

It is extremely good for you and contains no calories!

You can make it with jam too.
Did John get his email? Did you get to the bathroom?
Don't keep us in suspense!
No, I just had to wake him up or else there might have been an accident! I don't know how he can sleep so well at night and then so long later too!