Sleepover
It is always good to just be polite but honest. Thank your friend for the invitation but say you are not able to make it. At any age, it is always best to be direct but polite.
There is a French term for dinner that starts with a 'T', and that is 'Table d'hote'. (tobbla dote)
Sunday Dinner - 1991 Welcome T-T 1-1 was released on: USA: 2 June 1991
what do you do with your ant at her sleepover
Halo 3
It's a matter of opinion. Two people could look at the exact same set of circumstances for a particular sleepover and disagree on whether it was "good" or "bad".
Sleepover
"I had gone for dinner" can be used to say: (past tense) that you went out to get dinner and bring it back - you could instead say: I had gone to get dinner. Alternatively, it could mean (past tense) that you went out to eat dinner - you might want to say: I had gone out to eat dinner. Or, it could mean (past tense) that you were not there for dinner - in this case, a different phrasing could be: I had gone and would not be there for dinner, or, I had gone at dinner time. Please add a comment if you found this helpful, or would like to know more. :)
William T. Dumas has written: 'The dinner horn'
It was in "The Great Outdoors". He ate the largest steak at a restaurant for a free dinner and his brother-in-law , Dan Aykroyd, asked the waitress if they could get him to eat a dessert afterwards could they get some free t-shirts thrown in.
It is a feast. The dinner includes a lot of food.