It mean you done got to pay for it.
Do you mean 'a meal where guests help themselves'? If so, 'buffet' is probably the word you are looking for.
"Going Dutch" indeed means that everyone pays for his/her own meal.
Buffet.
A filet cut is great for a gourmet meal, and will impress your guests.
When planning a meal or event, it is important to ask guests about any dietary restrictions they may have. You can do this by including a section on the invitation where guests can indicate their dietary needs, or by reaching out to them individually to ask about any specific restrictions. This will help ensure that all guests can enjoy the meal without any issues.
a meal sytem where customers or guests generally serve themselves.
The chef prepared a delicious meal for the guests.
tacky.
The buccina was also used on festive occasions to announce when dinner guests needed to sit down at the beginning of a meal and stand up at the end.
it is a type of service where guests help themselves from the food at the buffet table.
No. A 'guest' is someone who has been invited, and they have a natural expectation that there food will be paid for. Unless, and this is often the case, the fact that they will be required to pay for their food is made very clear when they are invited.
It depends on which meal is meant by "dinner". In the dutch language dinner is usually understood to be the last meal of the day, which translated would be "avondeten" or (for a bigger or fancy meal) "diner" (french word). There are just two other meals of the day in the dutch language: Breakfast is "ontbijt" and lunch is either the same word, or also "middageten". A small meal in between would be called a "tussendoortje".