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Example sentences for "dine with"

  • Their common faith was a bond of union which led them to the same altar, and on that day Hatton had obtained their promise always to dine with him.

  • The minister asked the new member to dine with him, and found the new member singularly free from all party prejudices.

  • Mr Berners; "he has asked me to dine with him at the Clarendon on Saturday.

  • Thorpe at the Lock Chapel, and bring him home to dine with us.

  • Next week I dine with Littleton, the member for Staffordshire, and his handsome wife.

  • Accordingly Littleton has engaged me to dine with him, in order to introduce me to the Marquess.

  • It will be novel to dine with a mur--" "Stop!

  • I have invited them to dine with us; you will then be able to judge for yourselves whether the young lady is at all of the description Mr. Dyceworthy gives of her.

  • Then home, and Betty Michell and her husband come by invitation to dine with us, and, she I find the same as ever (which I was afraid of the contrary) .

  • I invited them to dine with me, and so away to White Hall to Sir W.

  • Here come also Mr. Howe to dine with me, and we had a good dinner and good merry discourse with much pleasure, I enjoying myself mightily to have friends at my table.

  • Up, and to church, and thence home; and Pelling comes by invitation to dine with me, and much pleasant discourse with him.

  • Pen, and myself, did make an appointment to dine with Sir W.

  • After dinner comes Mr. Pelling the Potticary, whom I had sent for to dine with me, but he was engaged.

  • One of my reasons for corning,' said Edith, 'was to beg and entreat and implore you and Mr Reardon to dine with us next Wednesday.

  • I'll ask you to dine with us quietly some time, but mind, you come at your own risk; don't blame me if you have a very dull evening.

  • We arranged to spend an evening together for old time's sake, and when I agreed to dine with him, he proposed that he should ask nobody else, so that we could chat without interruption.

  • After expressions of surprise on either side, hearing that I meant to spend the night in Alexandria, he asked me to dine with him at the English Club.

  • In fine, I will either dine by myself and pay you seven pawls a day, or I will pay you thirteen, and have both father and daughter to dine with me.

  • Leah is quite ready to pay me out of her private purse, and she wants to dine with you to assure you against being poisoned, as she informs me that you have expressed that fear.

  • If you won't dine with me, I will dine with you, and people may say what they like.

  • He said he had forgotten all about it, and a handsome old man begged his excellence to ask me to dine with him, though he had not the pleasure of knowing me.

  • She informed him that we should pass through Sens, where the General wished to dine with my mother, who had made every preparation for receiving him.

  • Murat treated the heads of the army; and the members of the Council of State, being again seated in their hackney-coaches with covered numbers, drove off to dine with Lucien.

  • The First Consul took such interest in these discussions that, to have an opportunity of conversing upon them in the evening, he frequently invited several members of the Council to dine with him.

  • After the failure of the artful publication of the pamphlet Fouche invited me to dine with him.

  • Up and to my office preparing things, by and by we met and sat Mr. Coventry and I till noon, and then I took him to dine with me, I having a wild goose roasted, and a cold chine of beef and a barrel of oysters.

  • Ford never inviting me to dine with him at all, and I was not sorry for it.

  • Batten to Trinity House, there to dine with him, which we did; and after dinner we fell talking, Sir J.

  • She had heard the young brewer ask Bowers to dine with him at his club that evening, and she saw that he looked forward to the dinner with pleasure.

  • I invite you both to dine with me on Saturday night, the day after 'Rheingold.

  • Wouldn't it be a better plan, since you wish me to meet him, for you both to dine with me?

  • As she went home to her boarding-house through the February slush, she wished she were going to dine with them.

  • In short, I found means to defer the categorical answer till next day, and invited the duke and his lordship to dine with me to-morrow.

  • They dine with us on Thursdays, and we dine with them on Tuesdays.

  • On Tuesdays and Thursdays he was open to receive invitations out to dinner; on Wednesdays and Saturdays he invited four friends to dine with him at Regent's Park.

  • I want you to dine with us on Sunday," said Joseph Loveredge.

  • An hour afterwards the game came to an end, and I took my leave, after inviting Lord Pembroke and the rest of the company to dine with me the next day.

  • She came to dine with me, and brought her daughter, whom the prospect of leaving her mother had quite cured.

  • A perfect French beauty has asked me to dine with her.

  • He was extremely surprised when he heard that they were the Charpillon and her aunt, and that the girl had invited herself when she heard he was to dine with me.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dine with" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    annual salary; chap like; chapter xxxvi; dine here; dine with; dined together; dined yesterday; divers sorts; during the last years; duties towards; elastic fluids; execute the; good chap; hard enough; highly civilized; land value; little figure; power engine; preferred before; secret session; strong solution; superior merit; usually known; vital principle; well expressed