We have no meanings for "got a dinner" in our records yet.
1 He's actually got a dinner jacket, and Consadine's got a starched shirt.
2 Then, more clearly, I've got a dinner of sorts rassled up.
3 I haven't got a dinner dress, and am not prepared.
4 Now I've got a dinner meeting, she said, absently.
5 We've got a dinner for two, and so far no one is any the wiser.
6 We've got a dinner to attend, says Haymitch.
7 Well, by Jove, my boy, I've got a dinner jacket, a Prince Albert and a silk hat.
9 I've got a dinner engagement.
10 You've got a dinner party on, and Frank won't enjoy it half as much as he would dining quietly with me.
12 "I've got a dinner party to go to."
13 "You've got a dinner - party , " he said.
14 "I ain't got a dinner - coat , Honey."
15 "All these people, excepting the officer there, are waiting to see him, Miss, and he's got a dinner engagement at eight..."
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Got a dinner through the time
Got a dinner across language varieties