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Example sentences for "dined yesterday"

  • Dined yesterday at the Mansion House; never having before seen a civic feast, I thought this a good opportunity.

  • Dined yesterday at Holland House; only Melbourne and Pahlen, and in the evening Senior came.

  • Dined yesterday at the Hollands': Normanby, Melbourne, and Luttrell; pretty good talk.

  • I dined yesterday at the Palace, much to my surprise, for I had no expectation of an invitation.

  • I dined yesterday at Lambeth, at the Archbishop's public dinner, the handsomest entertainment I ever saw.

  • Dined yesterday at Holland House; the Chancellor, Lord Grey, Luttrell, Palmerston, and Macaulay.

  • Dined yesterday at Agar Ellis's with eighteen people.

  • Dined yesterday at Sefton's; nobody there but Lord Grey and his family, Brougham and Montrond, the latter just come from Paris.

  • I dined yesterday at the Duchess of Rutland's, where there was a large party of Government people, and where nothing else was talked of.

  • I dined yesterday at a house where, as I entered the room late, among a lot of women I thought I saw you.

  • I dined yesterday at Greenwich with some great personages, who tried to make themselves lively, not, like the Germans, by throwing themselves out of the window, but by making a vast amount of noise.

  • I dined yesterday with a Bishop and a Dean, who made me almost become a Socialist.

  • Dined yesterday at the Countess d'Orsay's, with a large family party.

  • Dined yesterday at St.-Cloud with the Baron and Baroness de Ruysch; a very agreeable and intellectual pair, who have made a little paradise around them in the shape of an English pleasure ground, blooming with rare shrubs and flowers.

  • Dined yesterday at the Duchesse de Guiche's; a very pleasant party, increased by some agreeable people in the evening.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dined yesterday" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    arms centered; arrange them; beaten eggs; been seen; being obliged; dined together; dined yesterday; dozen paces; euery side; faro bank; flower garden; friendly fashion; had fallen; horned cattle; lower rate; neutral position; poor countries; pounder guns; present himself; there must; three drops; tomato sauce; whose term