answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The sentence is not, because an idiom is usually a phrase. The idiom is "do lunch," which means to have lunch together, usually while discussing business.

User Avatar

Wiki User

11y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Is the sentence 'let's do lunch some time next week' an idiom?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Idiom Do lunch in a sentence?

Let's do lunch some time next week.


What type of figurative language is this sentence. The icybitter night seemed to disappear as Sally curled up next to the warm crackling fire?

Idiom


Are there two possessive adjectives in this sentence YOUR lunch is next to HIS on the kitchen table.?

Yes, the word 'your' and the word 'his' are both possessive adjectives.


What is a sentence or two that lets the audience know that a speaker has finished one point and is moving on to the next?

"Now that we've covered the first point, let's move on to the next topic."


How can you use the word resumed in a sentence?

They resumed their conversation after lunch. The game resumed after half time.


How do you use the word lunches in a sentence?

"You all need to bring your lunches to camp for the next week." My friend and I had to eat our lunches in silence.


Where did this idiom come from'' the ball is in your court''?

This is a sports idiom -- it comes from basketball, where the "court" is the playing field. If the ball is in your court, you have control of it and it is your turn to play. This idiom means that whatever happens next is up to you.It pretty much means it is up to you to make the next move.It means, like, what happens next is up to you, you have to make the decisionThis is a sports idiom. The court is the basketball court. If the ball is on your side, or in your court, then it is your turn to move.


What does it mean to put banana peels next to lilac bushes?

it is an idiom


The next sentence is a lie. The first sentence?

The next sentence is a lie because it is not a sentence, it has no verb. So, the first sentence is also a lie because there is no 'next sentence'.


Can you have lunch next week?

Yes, I think i will, what time? And where?


If a guy paid for your lunch should you pay for his lunch next time?

If you work together and are just friends the next time you go for lunch tell him you insist it's your treat. If you are becoming serious about each other then let him keep paying.


What is a sentence for the word periodic?

How you want it... *Angela had periodic changes in her classes at school. Used as an adverb... *Billy periodicly changed his lunch from a peanut butter sandwich one day to ham the next.