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The phrase "down at the pub" is correct and usable in written English.
It is typically used in casual or informal situations to describe someone going to or being at a pub, which is a type of bar or drinking establishment. Example: After a long day at work, I decided to meet my friends down at the pub for a few pints.
Exact(25)
Imagine yourself down at the pub on a Saturday night.
"Well, I bit you git to tell some good yarns down at the pub".
"Sourdough wars," he said ominously to my husband, down at the pub.
When it's karaoke night down at the pub, nobody wants to get up first.
He told his mates down at the pub after our encounter in the car, about his bursts of sadness.
Would a maid really risk serious trouble by getting "a little bit tiddly down at the pub"?
Similar(35)
Mr. Roberts, who paid a reported $1.2 million for the down-at-the-heels pub -- an astronomical sum by the standards of the poet's era -- is in a 50-50 partnership with Neil Morrissey, a British actor known here for his part in a sitcom called "Men Behaving Badly" and television advertisements for a home improvement company.
He says this as though he just won at trivia down at the local pub.
There's not a lot happening down at the Lake Pub (Lek Peurrb) – maybe it's not the "in" place anymore.
I imagine her in conversation with a friend, down at the baby pub: "Of course, once you have parents, everything changes.
Down at the toddler pub, Io may soon be confiding her concerns about her dad's slow cognitive development, and asking if anyone knows a good private tutor.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com