Want this question answered?
Yes.
Before lunch and dinner the parent reads to the children.
The correct way to say this would be "Mark HAD lunch." This means he already ate it. You could also say "Mark WILL HAVE lunch," meaning sometime in the future. Another correct sentence would be "Mark HAS lunch." This means that he is in possession of lunch but has not eaten it yet.
yes it is correct.
"Did you eat your beets at lunch?" - Beets is the correct homophone for this sentence, as it refers to the vegetable.
dinner
you have not to go swimming after a big dinner.
this sentecs is correct ? The bakery isnext the dinner.
Yes.
say that you ate spagetti for lunch and steak for dinner
Yes, "she treated us to a great dinner" is grammatically correct English.
If you capitalize the I the yes. It would be: I had children cooking dinner.