Trouvez des professeurs en Anglais
Pedro Henrique
I ate kitchen, rice and pasta IN my lunch
Or
I ate kitchen, rice and pasta ON my lunch.
*Chicken
5 oct. 2017 21:52
Réponses · 5
2
FOR lunch=)
5 octobre 2017
1
"I ate chicken, rice and pasta FOR my lunch" would be grammatically correct.
However, it is far more common for native speakers to use the verb "to have" (instead of the verb "to eat") and it is also far more common to simply say "lunch" (instead of saying "my lunch").
Thus, your sentence would be: "I had chicken, rice and pasta for lunch".
More examples:
We usually ask "what are you HAVING for lunch?" (not "what are you EATING for YOUR lunch?")
We usually reply "I am HAVING chicken for lunch" (not "I am EATING chicken for MY lunch")
We usually ask "what did you HAVE for lunch?" (not "what did you EAT for YOUR lunch?")
We usually reply "I HAD chicken for lunch" (not "I ATE chicken for MY lunch").
Note: this same rule applies to other meals (breakfast, dinner, tea, supper).
We would ask "what did you HAVE for breakfast?" (not "what did you EAT for YOUR breakfast?")
We would say "I HAD sausages for dinner" (not "I ATE sausages for MY dinner")
etc
etc
6 octobre 2017
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Pedro Henrique
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Français, Portugais, Espagnol
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Français, Espagnol
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