No, you would say "after a great lunch at...." Use "an" only if the word following it starts with a vowel sound.
You say "had lunch"
Have a lunch.
To ask "How is your lunch?" in Polish, you would say "Jak ci smakuje lunch?"
you say lunch for and then how many people you have
the Blossom Deli is a great lunch destination. They have a great Reuben sandwich. The Tidewater Grill is a great lunch place. They have a good selection from sandwiches to lunch entrees.
In Cantonese, you say "lunch" as 午餐 (ng5 caan1).
Lkiesdf kkfri Rkdifr first day of the beach was a good day to come here and have to do a great weekend here for a great beach and great place for lunch and or dinner or here for a great breakfast or a great lunch place for a breakfast place in a great place for a breakfast lunch and a lunch or dinner or breakfast or a brew or leave the beach to mikasa is a great one of attack On Titans watch it NOW GO BACK FOR A BREAKFAST GREAT PLACE AND FOR LUNCH AND BREAKFAST LUNCH HERE FOR A
wat krijgen we voor lunch ?
Can I take you to Lunch tomorrow.
To say "had your lunch" in Tamil, you can say "உணவு சாப்பிட்டீர்களா?" (uṇavu sāppiṭṭīrkaḷā?).
'time for lunch' is in Dutch 'tijd voor de lunch'
The correct English would be, "I had my lunch in a park".