You can, but it is not idiomatic English. If you mean that people worked straight through their lunch time, use No one took lunch
You can, but it is not idiomatic English. If you mean that people worked straight through their lunch time, use No one took lunch
What time are you doing lunch today is an interrogative sentence. "What time" could be said as "When" but asking "what time" requests the person state a more specific time. The phrase "doing lunch" is awkward writing, since people eat lunch, not "do lunch". Adding "today" makes it specific to "this day". This kind of question would be asked sometime in the morning hours, in preparation or planning for lunch activities.
You would say "Kei te waikīkī te waiparoro" in Maori to mean "It is time for lunch."
dinner
hey whats for lunch ?
Exit to lunch
'time for lunch' is in Dutch 'tijd voor de lunch'
dont you mean when not where and the same time we all do
at lunch time of course
There is no 'official' lunch time.
Lunch time ;)