Lunches
in sentence
34 examples of Lunches in a sentence
Let them take long
lunches.
"I can put the wash on the line, pack the lunches, hand out the kisses and be at work at five to nine.
A couple months ago, Payne started a food blog called NeverSeconds, and she would take her camera with her every day to school to document her school
lunches.
And, as sometimes happens, this blog acquired first dozens of readers, and then hundreds of readers, and then thousands of readers, as people tuned in to watch her rate her school lunches, including on my favorite category, "Pieces of hair found in food."
People were eating boxed
lunches
on roundtop tables, and there was a sad band playing music, or a band playing sad music, probably both.
She was still there at the school and she was busily preparing
lunches
for the day.
That equals up to a little over five billion
lunches
made every school year.
I depend on
lunches
from drug companies to serve patients."
And you got to meet a bunch of editors and authors and agents at very, very fancy
lunches
and dinners.
I wasn't supposed to have fully resourced biology or chemistry labs, school buses that brought me door-to-door, freshly prepared school
lunches
or even air conditioning.
But if our politicians can't agree on things like health care or even school lunches, I just don't see a path where they'll find consensus on something as big and as expensive as universal basic life income.
Afterward, the leftovers get distributed to people who are out on the street, and importantly, there's enough money left to provide a thousand free
lunches
for this community in the days that follow.
Gordo Cooper even comments that he gets on the cover of magazines, gets a free car, free
lunches
all across America, a free home with all the furnishings and loads of money and "I ain't even been up there yet".
If it wasn't for the fact that it was pouring down outside and there was absolutely nothing else to do in this tiny town we were stuck in(already had 2
lunches
to waste time) we'd have left.
I was a teacher in a Hamilton school where the crew ate their
lunches
between takes, as scenes from this one were being shot.
However, as widow whose main employment seems to have been as a lady who lunches, her work skills are rather non-existent.
It reminds me of the stuff the school cooks used to make out of all the bad food that was left over from a week of hot
lunches.
But if one really thinks that free
lunches
exist, there is still no reason to privatize: government could get the additional returns by investing in the stock market itself.
Meanwhile, the entitlement programs that Republicans denounce, such as unemployment benefits, school lunches, and food stamps, amount to less than one-third this amount – roughly $600 billion – even after four years of record-high unemployment.
Schools should provide nutrition education (and healthy lunches).
Lesson One in School FoodNEW YORK – Had you told me a year ago that I would attend a conference devoted to school lunches, I would have laughed.
A little context: In the United States, subsidized school
lunches
started in 1946 as a welfare program – but one focused on the welfare of farmers, not schoolchildren.
Now, new legislation mandates better nutrition, bans sugary drinks and sweets, and forbids the parallel sale of unhealthy alternatives to the main menu (which had been a major source of funding for subsidized lunches).
But the new laws do not specify how healthy
lunches
are to be provided, and local communities are still expected to provide the funding (except for the surplus commodities).
Indeed, how to change school
lunches
has more to do with money and business than with health and nutrition.
Aside from the focus on price and the need to absorb US farms’ excess output, school
lunches
reflect a broader trend toward turning food preparation into industrial production.
But there is another issue: serving better school
lunches
often requires restoring the food-preparation facilities that existed before.
But there should be no free
lunches
either.
I am an economist – a professor of the Dismal Science, in which there are no free lunches, in which benefits are always balanced by costs, and in which stories that sound too good to be true almost inevitably are.
He’s a Burroughs who put to music the great parade of the Beat generation, with its wild parties and naked
lunches.
Related words
School
There
Provide
Would
Which
Subsidized
Still
People
Nutrition
Money
Dinners
Where
Things
Their
Started
Should
Schools
Music
Little
Hundreds