Dinner is the correct spelling of the word which refers to a mealtime.
"What is for dinner today?"
Diner is the correct spelling of the word referring to a café-like restaurant popular in the US, usually at a roadside.
"The local diner makes great burgers".
The word is spelled banquet. The couple attended a banquet dinner.
The price of the dinner includes only the meat. Everything else is al a carte meaning it must be paid for separately.
No, dinner is a noun. The corresponding pronoun for dinner is it.
A direct object is a part of a sentence, and not a part of speech. Dinner is a noun. Whether or not it is a direct object depends on how it is used. "Dinner was good." Here, dinner is a subject. (Something was good. What was good? Dinner.) "I ate dinner." Here, dinner is a direct object. (I ate something. What did you eat? Dinner.) "I like eating cashews with my dinner." Here, dinner is the object of a preposition. (I ate cashews with something. With what? With dinner.) As you see, nouns have many uses in the English language, and a direct object is but one of them.
Wondering is correct if you are looking for the word meaning "deep thinking"."I am wondering what to have for dinner."Wandering is correct if you are looking for the word meaning "walking or travelling"."Why are you wandering around the house?"
cena
What? A you meaning "dinner" as in the meal or "diner" as in the place where you eat.
Réveillon de Noël
The word is spelled banquet. The couple attended a banquet dinner.
The possible words include:repeats - does over againrepast - (noun) a meal or dinner
they are used for dinner...... and you spell the 4th word wrong ha ha
Vous êtes invités à un dîner
J'ai eu le poulet pour le dîner
You spelled it correctly: dining
Vendredi j'ai eu du poisson pour souper
l'heure de la casse-croûte
You can't spell neighbours?Or, an American (with American spelling but proper grammar) might better say:A 'potluck' is a dinner to which friends or neighbors bring food to share.