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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a dinner with a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to an event or occasion where a dinner is shared with someone, often implying a social or formal gathering.
Example: "I have been invited to a dinner with a famous author next week."
Alternatives: "an evening with a" or "a meal with a".
Exact(29)
But Rémy, begging to differ, recalls a dinner with a scholarly visitor from China.
One night I attended a dinner with a bunch of writers and artists.
For example, he submitted receipts for a dinner with a man without identifying the man as his father.
Surfer Blood, with some of those deals in place already, is somewhere in the middle of that process, and had a dinner with a publisher scheduled between gigs.
A Conservative minister with responsibility for taxation attended a dinner with a "tax intelligence" company that promises "financial efficiencies" to its paying clients, records show.
David: I went to only one inaugural event afterward, a dinner with a whole posse of cabinet members and Senators and Democratic House leaders.
Similar(28)
"I remember a lunch or a dinner with an editor of the Sun, Stuart Higgins".
He booked a dinner with Nathan Herzog at a kosher restaurant.
Not long ago, I was at a dinner with the chief executive of a large bank.
A dinner with friends?
The couple met 11 years ago at a dinner with mutual friends, a married couple.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com