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The phrase "a diner full of" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a diner that is occupied by many people or a specific group of individuals.
Example: "As I walked into the small town diner, I was greeted by a diner full of cheerful patrons enjoying their meals."
Alternatives: "a restaurant packed with" or "an eatery crowded with".
Exact(2)
All the harmonicas were in that bus! We'd parked outside a diner full of hostile locals and state troopers.
Just wait until he tells a diner full of voters in Ames, Iowa, that he's "always considered himself a Hoosier at heart".
Similar(58)
SIPPING my coffee at the Cookie Jar, a delightful diner full of Air Force families on the outskirts of Fairbanks, I was in the third round of negotiations with Mark, my travel companion, over whether we should drive to the Arctic Circle.
Everyone is standing and shouting, everyone including the waitress, including my mother, the diner full of fire and zeal, as if this lone pre-season game had any bearing on what's to come.
The play is of the diner-full-of-dreams genre.
Trump tweeted an hour later that once he gets involved, the "price will come WAY DOWN!" Day 24 – Feb. 12: Donald Trump apparently discussed national security issues (specifically, North Korea's test-firing of a ballistic missile) on a Mar-a-Lago terrace full of diners and staff.
At the end of the day, be prepared for a kitchen that smells like breakfast at a highway diner, and a pan full of dangerously molten fat crowned with cracklings.
Tripleseat's founder, Jonathan Morse, says an average client makes 30% of their income from private events and managing them is a huge headache, because they take a lot more coordination and details than a restaurant full of individual diners.
The minute-long teaser is just a single, sustained panning shot as Donald Glover and the show's stars pose in diners, driveways, and a club full of levitating strippers.
Other photos show what could possibly be Luke's Diner or Taylor Doose's Old Fashioned Soda Shoppe, a table full of delicious baked goods (Sookie, is that you?) and a sign hinting at the return of Mrs. Kim's antique shop. .
Table 7 (US/Marko Slavnic & Andrew McDonald): A simple argument between lovers dining in a Chinese restaurant is being listened to by an Asian man in a dank room full of those surveilling the diners.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com