0
Vincent Teo Posted 16 years ago
Grammar

"styrofoam box"

(a) What do we call if I bought some food which is kept in a white box (made of styrofoam), do I call it "styrofoam box"?

(b) Do we call "lunch box" which is used to keep food in it for lunch; "dinner box" which is used to keep food for dinner?
  

Top answer

a-- Yes b-- Yes, I would, but it's not critical, since for many people lunch = dinner.

  • a-- Yes b-- Yes, I would, but it's not critical, since for many people lunch = dinner.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
a-- Yes
b-- Yes, I would, but it's not critical, since for many people lunch = dinner.
0
Can I say it as "polyethylene box" instead of "styrofoam box"? Are they same in meaning?
0
I'm not a chemist, but 'polyethylene' is normally used of various flexible plastics, as tarpaulin sheets and plastic bags, while 'styrofoam' is used of the hard, light, white plastic of boxes and packing peanuts.

Related Questions