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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a barbeque" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a social gathering where food is cooked outdoors, typically on a grill.
Example: "We're planning to have a barbeque this weekend at the park, and everyone is invited."
Alternatives: "a cookout" or "a grill party".
Exact(57)
I invited 50 friends to a barbeque.
In June, there is a barbeque in Rich's honor.
Kibera's slums assault the senses like a barbeque in a hot toilet.
A colleague here at the Guardian recently emailed a banker friend an invitation to a barbeque.
But it does lead to the balcony and a barbeque for outdoor grilling.
They gathered around their brightly painted VW station wagons and began to prepare a barbeque.
Hawkins plays Marianne, a mercurial, highly verbal quantum physicist, who meets Spall's lugubrious Roland, a beekeeper, at a barbeque.
One captain of industry thanked him for removing his daughter's appendix by giving him a barbeque grill.
Scotiabank's Alan Clarke publishes a comment entitled 'UK Retail Sales Sizzler': Hands up who had a barbeque in July?
— Dan Giese took some teammates to his parents' home in San Clemente for a barbeque on Saturday night.
At that time, Mr. Coetzee was a professor of English literature in Cape Town, and a fellow academic invited him home for a barbeque.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com