do lunch
English
editVerb
editdo lunch (third-person singular simple present does lunch, present participle doing lunch, simple past did lunch, past participle done lunch)
- To have a lunchtime meeting, usually at a restaurant.
- 2008, Clyde Dowell II, Women Can't Play, page 78:
- The two women exchanged phone numbers and promised to do lunch. In Sharon's world, a promise to do lunch was not to be taken lightly and after a lengthy phone conversation Sunday evening, she decided that Monday would be a good day to have lunch with their new found friends.
- 2014, Mary Monroe, God Ain't Blind:
- I thought you said you do lunch with a lot of the people you do business with.
- 2014, Geoffrey Gilson, Dead Men Don't Eat Lunch, page 16:
- We'd done lunch in one of the older hostelries in the historic part of Beaconsfield, and were now off on a meandering journey through the rural delights of western England.
- 2018, Tony McDowell, How Did I Get Here?, page 54:
- In those days business lunches were the norm and usually consisted of a couple of pints, but I very rarely did lunch.