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Hello, Neil. Now, tell me. Do you usually go Dutch when you take someone out to dinner?
Now, go Dutch means to share the cost of something, for example a meal in a restaurant.
I wish it were more socially expected to go Dutch on the first few dates,
I wish it were more socially expected to go dutch on the first few dates.
with the dressing on the side. Next is ""Go Dutch"" Go Dutch is when everyone pays for
their own meals separately. So for example, my co-workers and I always go Dutch. And last
A very lovely idiom here: "go Dutch." Go Dutch?
Go Dutch means each person pays for his or her half.
Are you cool if we go Dutch?
Are you cold for go Dutch?
Now, I've seen a lot of English teachers teaching "let's go Dutch," the English idiom.
No one says "let's go Dutch." So here are some more natural phrases that English speakers use.