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Definition of dine verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

dine

verb
 
/daɪn/
 
/daɪn/
[intransitive] (formal)
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they dine
 
/daɪn/
 
/daɪn/
he / she / it dines
 
/daɪnz/
 
/daɪnz/
past simple dined
 
/daɪnd/
 
/daɪnd/
past participle dined
 
/daɪnd/
 
/daɪnd/
-ing form dining
 
/ˈdaɪnɪŋ/
 
/ˈdaɪnɪŋ/
Idioms Phrasal Verbs
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  1. to eat dinner
    • We dined with my parents at a restaurant in town.
    Collocations RestaurantsRestaurantsEating out
    • eat (lunch/​dinner)/dine/​meet at/​in a restaurant
    • go (out)/take somebody (out) for lunch/​dinner/​a meal
    • have dinner/​lunch/​a meal with somebody
    • make/​have a reservation (in/​under the name of Yamada)
    • reserve/ (especially British English) book a table for six
    • ask for/​request a table for two/​a table by the window
    In the restaurant
    • wait to be seated
    • show somebody to their table
    • sit in the corner/​by the window/​at the bar/​at the counter
    • hand somebody/​give somebody the menu/​wine list
    • open/​read/​study/​peruse the menu
    • the restaurant has a three-course set menu/​a children’s menu/​an extensive wine list
    • taste/​sample/​try the wine
    • the waiter takes your order
    • order/​choose/​have the soup of the day/​one of the specials/​the house (British English) speciality/(especially North American English) specialty
    • serve/​finish the first course/​the starter/​the main course/​dessert/​coffee
    • complain about the food/​the service/​your meal
    • enjoy your meal
    Paying
    • pay/​ask for (especially British English) the bill/(North American English) the check
    • pay for/​treat somebody to dinner/​lunch/​the meal
    • service is (not) included
    • give somebody/​leave (somebody) a tip
    Extra Examples
    • They dined in style in the hotel restaurant.
    • the joys of dining al fresco
    Topics Cooking and eatingc2
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • al fresco
    • in style
    • out
    preposition
    • on
    See full entry
    Word OriginMiddle English: from Old French disner, probably from desjëuner ‘to break fast’, from des- (expressing reversal) + jëun ‘fasting’ (from Latin jejunus).
Idioms
wine and dine (somebody)
  1. to go to restaurants, etc. and enjoy good food and drink; to entertain somebody by buying them good food and drink
    • The town offers many opportunities for wining and dining.
    • The firm spent thousands wining and dining potential clients.
    • His boss took him out to be wined and dined.
See dine in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary
dizzy
adjective
 
 
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