The verb for dinner is dine.
Other verbs are dines, dining and dined.
"We will dine well tonight".
"I am dining".
"We dined through the evening".
It can be, but it can also be a noun. He cooks dinner for three people. This is a verb. Three cooks prepared this dinner. This is a noun.
It can be, but it can also be a noun. He cooks dinner for three people. This is a verb. Three cooks prepared this dinner. This is a noun.
The verb has to match with the subject, which in this case is "you," however "have" is not the only part of the verb, since this is a question using "where did" "did" is a part of the verb. "You did have" is the correct subject/verb agreement, so "have" is the word you should use.
"will" is the helping verb in the sentence "Nick will eat spaghetti for dinner." Will creates the future tense of eat.
Dinner because it is the object of the verb "ate". Ate what? Ate dinner.
It depends.If it is "The cook was mad" then it's a noun.If it is " the girl will cook dinner" then it is a verb.
In this sentence "preparing dinner" is the gerund phrase. A gerund is a verb doing the job of a noun. Preparing is the gerund form of the verb prepare.
The simple future tense of the verb "have" is "will have." Example: "I will have dinner at 7 PM."
eat
Will visit, take
The verb in the sentence "Without sugar, the blueberries were too sour for the dinner guest" is "were." It indicates the state of the blueberries, describing them as being too sour.
In the sentence Mom made dinner:Mom is the subjectmade is the verbdinner is the objectShe made dinner - She is a pronoun subject.