[
US
/ˈbɹəntʃ/
]
[ UK /bɹˈʌntʃ/ ]
[ UK /bɹˈʌntʃ/ ]
VERB
-
eat a meal in the late morning
We brunch in Sundays
NOUN
- combination breakfast and lunch; usually served in late morning
How To Use brunch In A Sentence
- Coming back from a child-free brunch at our favourite cafe earlier today, A asked me if I regretted his getting a vasectomy. November « 2009 « oh frabjous day!
- It's a grey, cold day here in Amsterdam and I have to go and raid the fridge to find something for our belated Saturday brunch.
- And they're highly versatile: You can make deviled eggs for appetizers, spike them in eggnog or make quiches, frittatas, omelets or other brunch-type party fare.
- Always a late riser, I'd wake up around eleven every morning to brunch at a deliciously set table where my ‘roomie’, as I called her, would regale me with the tale of her day so far.
- Had a huge brunch (kumara latkes, venison and whiskey sausages, liver and onions, poached egg and apple juice) and now I'm digesting in the sunshine.
- You can make deviled eggs for appetizers, spike them in eggnog or make quiches, frittatas, omelets or other brunch-type party fare.
- And they're highly versatile: You can make deviled eggs for appetizers, spike them in eggnog or make quiches, frittatas, omelets or other brunch-type party fare.
- Or maybe we could just invite the morons to brunch and screen Beaches over mimosas.
- As for returning for brunch, lunch and high tea? Times, Sunday Times
- Tickets are priced at 310 per person and include a champagne brunch and four-course supper. Times, Sunday Times