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The phrase "a kind lunch" is not commonly used in written English and may sound awkward.
It could be used to describe a lunch that is generous or thoughtful in nature, perhaps in a context where someone is being treated to a meal.
Example: "She prepared a kind lunch for her friend who was feeling down, complete with their favorite dishes."
Alternatives: "a generous lunch" or "a thoughtful lunch".
Exact(1)
There's a saying, "Eat breakfast like a kind, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a peasant".
Similar(59)
If I spill soup, or a sandwich, or, in a kind of lunch-special combo, soup and a sandwich, on my tie or all over my lap, my dog looks at me and says (I am going to translate her looks and tail wags), "Don't worry about it.
Reckless tweeted on Thursday morning that he had turned down a "kind invitation to lunch" from Wheeler.
TR: What about Internet telephony-that seems like another example of how the Net can provide a kind of free lunch.
It was a kind of makeshift lunch when you couldn't get anything better.
An installation by the New York collective 16 Beaver Group, in collaboration with the Canadian magazine Fuse, replicates a setting for one of the group's lunches, where speculative discussions on social questions are shared, via the Internet, with a wide circle of off-site participants, a kind of global lunch-bunch.
Each lovely setting has three partitioned sections: one is for a sandwich, one is for a cup and one is for a cigarette, a kind of ashtray and lunch holder in one.
Schiffer argues, in effect, that given our proposition-talk and thought, propositions are, in D. M. Armstrong's phrase, a kind of "ontological free lunch".
So, starting in 1999, with input from staff members and parents, she created a new kind of lunch period.
He is, likably, not an either/or kind of lunch companion.
"It's very much about a kind of regal composure, about lunch more than dinner, about a certain kind of glacial hospitality," said Wayne Koestenbaum, who exhumed and laboriously examined the puffed-out hair and haut bourgeois accouterments of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in "Jackie Under My Skin" (1995).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com