This is a common occurrence: you would like to go out to do something fun and share it with a friend, but you cannot afford to treat the other person. There are two things to keep in mind at the start:
If you are already at work, for instance, you can simply say, "I'm going to (name the place) for lunch. Would you care to go along?" Or something equally casual.
If you are going to call them on the phone, it's perfectly acceptable to say "I'm going to the (the movies or out to eat). Would you like to go with me? I'd love to treat you, but I can't just now. However, I will (buy my own ticket or pay for my meal)."
Just keep it light and fun, and don't dwell on the fact that you can't pick up the whole bill, this is what friends do. And just a tip: if you are ordering a meal and yours costs close to what your friend's cost, just offer to split the check and the tip. It's much nicer than spending time trying to figure out who pays what for each item. Either that, or when the waiter comes to take your order, say "Separate checks, please." Then you will get a bill for only what you ate.
Usually, if you were invited to dinner, you don't have to pay; however, it is polite to offer anyway.
Your host.
no
He was invited in to the group and he accepted the offer
Depends. Usually whom ever invites the date pays, regardless if you're a male or female. But traditionally a male pay if he invited the girl. In your case she invited you so ask her what the plan of pay is.
tacky.
The correct spelling is invitations (notes to those invited).
offer to pay for half of it offer to pay for half of it
The present perfect tense of invited is has invited or have invited.
T-Mobile offers pay as you go plans. They offer pay monthly plans, pay monthly phones, SIM-only monthly plans, and pay monthly deals. They offer 18 or 24 month pay monthly plans with the latest phones.
The present perfect of the verb to invite is "has invited" and "have invited".Examples:I have invited my sisters.You have invited my sisters.He (she) has invited my sisters.We have invited my sisters.They have invited my sisters.
No, it is not common or appropriate to pay people to attend your birthday party. Guests are typically invited to celebrate with you out of friendship or goodwill, not for financial compensation.