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  1. dinerDiner = a person eating in a restaurant; a small restaurant We ate at the new diner last night. Dinner = a meal you eat in the evening We had dinner with the whole family.|A diner is where you eat. Dinner is what you eat.|@Cintia653 Yeah|A diner is a basically a place to go eat. A dinner is a meal. Ex: We should go eat at the diner that I saw on the other block Ex: What did you have for ...

  2. dinerA diner is a type of restaurant unique to the United States. It’s a very small, almost always rectangular in shape, and very local without franchises. Here is a photo. I grew up in the 1950s in the Northeast of the United States and there were still quite a few in existence. Now they are rare, you don’t see them very much. |@juanito2000 Diners offer a wide range of foods, mostly ...

  3. an eatery 和a diner 有什么区别?. 如果难以说明的话,请教我一下例句。. Same thing. I don’t use or hear very often the word eatery, but have seen it used in the name of restaurants. Examples are “Joe’s Eatery” or “Main Street Eatery”. Same thing. I don’t use or hear very often the word eatery, but have seen ...

  4. I've never used "I'll stand a dinner" before. Is it like "I'll make you dinner?"|@Nora_Kakashi Oh okay, I got it. Thanks! I really have never heard that though. I would say "treat you to a..." or "buy you a..." But for your original question, I think A sounds more natural.

  5. have dinner Have dinner is neutral. That just means I’m going to eat at night (could be at home, could be alone etc) Have a dinner is more formal. It means we’re going to go to a restaurant and have a sit-down meal together|@yuhan70361 Hmmm yes but it would be less common to use those words in that way. Well, at least breakfast is almost never formal enough to warrant that. You could have ...

  6. pour le dîner "au diner" and "pour le dîner" peuvent être utilisés pour annoncer ce qu'on va manger : "au dîner/pour le dîner on mangera du bœuf". But "au dîner" Can be used to say "at the moment when we will have dinner" for example : "on parlera de ça au dîner", however it's not correct to say "on en parlera pour le dîner", I mean French people will understand but it doesn't sound ...

  7. - At the diner, you pay the cashier near the door. - Jen bought a house because she got tired of paying her landlord. We use “pay for” when we talk about the event or item we give money for and receive at the same time. Usually you pay for services or goods that you receive at the time of paying: - The boss paid for lunch.

  8. dinnerThere is no difference. Supper is commonly used in the uk. And dinner is commonly used in America |dinner - food that u eat during night around 7pm-9pm supper -food that u eat at very late time...around 10pm-1am ...|@dyowvi supper (midnight snack same meaning) but we usually use 'supper'|@eerny78 ohhh.... got it! thanks!的同义词

  9. Come to dinner No difference.|They're both natural, but I would use them in different situations. "Come to dinner" - You made dinner, and you're letting the other people in your house know that it's ready. "Come for dinner" - This sounds like an invitation for someone who wasn't planning on eating dinner at your house. "Kids, the food is ready! Come to dinner!" "You should come for dinner, and ...

  10. See you for dinner.There isn't really any difference, but if you parse it out, "See you for dinner" puts the emphasis on dinner. There is going to be a dinner; it is something special which you and I will attend.. "See you at dinner" puts the emphasis on you. When will you see each other next? Tonight at dinner. It is just a regular dinner, but the important part is that you and I will see ...

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