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lunchtime

[ US /ˈɫəntʃˌtaɪm/ ]
[ UK /lˈʌnt‍ʃta‍ɪm/ ]
NOUN
  1. the customary or habitual hour for eating lunch
    he observed a regular lunchtime

How To Use lunchtime In A Sentence

  • The Year 9 mentors are trained by children's charity Childline and run lunchtime support clubs as well as a drop-in centre where younger students can call in for advice or help.
  • Around lunchtime we stopped in Christchurch, which is a much larger city than I had expected. Stonetable.org » 2003 » December
  • AS THE chug of a train rumbles overhead, Andy Arnold takes a seat amid the lunchtime bustle of the Arches theatre bar in Glasgow's city centre.
  • We must make sure that this meeting doesn't lap over into lunchtime,because we have other arrangements.
  • For the moment, though, London is making the most of it, and I spent lunchtime sat in Soho Square reading a rival magazine amid the topless cuties.
  • So why all the beastly transmogrifications, I ask Kay over our lunchtime bowls of coconut and lime soup.
  • On the day of the attack, a gang of youths had marched into the school's foyer at lunchtime.
  • In fact, I was pretty sure that the latest romances were the major topics of the staffroom at recesses and lunchtime breaks.
  • Lunchtime is the busiest with Temple barristers and solicitors grabbing a quick bite and drink before a dash back to the courts. Times, Sunday Times
  • I heard Rene on "ello-ello" this lunchtime (sad, I know!) using the word "didicoy". Tony Blair: The Next Labour Prime Minister?
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