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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

"a lunch" or "lunch"

"After a long walk and a lunch, it will be fun to drive."
Is this correct ?I mean "a lunch" or "lunch"?
  

Top answer

" If you described it, you would use "a" -- after a light lunch, after a lunch of grilled salmon, etc. You also use "a" to mean, more or less, a party/event that takes place during lunch. They had a lunch for me the day I lft the company.

  • " If you described it, you would use "a" -- after a light lunch, after a lunch of grilled salmon, etc.
  • You also use "a" to mean, more or less, a party/event that takes place during lunch.
  • They had a lunch for me the day I lft the company.
  • "
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1 Answers
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In most cases, we'd just say "lunch."

If you described it, you would use "a" -- after a light lunch, after a lunch of grilled salmon, etc.
You also use "a" to mean, more or less, a party/event that takes place during lunch. They had a lunch for me the day I lft the company.

In your sentence, just use "lunch."

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