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Discover LudwigThe phrase "had a dish" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It can be used to indicate that someone has consumed or eaten a particular dish or meal. Here is an example: "After a long day at work, I had a dish of spaghetti and meatballs for dinner."
Exact(15)
On a visit to August about a year ago, I had a dish of chicken paprikash, made with a whole, succulent baby chicken, and there was "Hungarian venison goulash" on a more recent dinner menu, though our server warned us away from it.
"We had a dish like Spam," Muldoon recalled.
I once had a dish called 'minute mouse' in Peking.
They had a dish on the menu that was thirty duck hearts in curry.
Soon enough, most every family — no matter how rich or poor — had a dish at home.
Now, confronted with these bits of pasta, unshapely, shoddy-looking — malfatti, in Italian — he had a dish: malfatti al maialino.
Similar(45)
If I sipped it that way, I'd have a dish of walnuts at hand.
The group, which studies Trenton's once-sprawling ceramic industry, is having a "Dish Discovery Day".
One pot, one pan and a bowl, and you have a dish a child could make, perhaps minus the peas.
Add a film of clarified butter as a kind of force multiplier and you have a dish of intense simplicity.
But the prince and his wife Catherine are content to have a dish of brown rice and an accompanying salad.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com