Product names in English. Words, idioms, phrasal verbs and persistent combinations on the topic Food

Theme Food   includes a lot of words and the list goes on and on. For those who have just joined us, here is an additional list of food related phrases that will come in handy if you are planning a trip abroad - . I advise you to go there and already remember the names of those products that you will eat and, of course, your favorite dishes!

The list of English words No. 2 on the subject "Food" (for continuing)

  1. bacon and eggs - scrambled eggs with ham (bacon)
  2. omelette [‘omlit] - omelet
  3. cottage cheese - cottage cheese
  4. sausages - sausages
  5. a hamburger - hamburger
  6. boil - boil
  7. fry - fry
  8. boiled eggs - boiled eggs
  9. soft-boiled eggs - soft-boiled eggs
  10. hard-boiled eggs - hard-boiled eggs
  11. semolina [ˌsem (ə) ’liːnə] - semolina
  12. ham - ham
  13. biscuits - cookies
  14. pancakes - pancakes
  15. cocoa - cocoa
  16. mushroom soup - mushroom soup
  17. fish soup - fish soup
  18. pea soup - pea soup
  19. roast meat (chiken) - fried meat (chicken)
  20. fried potatoes - fried potatoes
  21. boiled potatoes - boiled potatoes
  22. mashed potatoes - mashed potatoes
  23. buckwheat [‘bʌkwiːt] porridge - buckwheat porridge
  24. letice - lettuce
  25. a side dish - side dish
  26. a filling - filling
  27. soft drinks - soft drinks
  28. strong drinks - strong drinks
  29. cocktail - cocktail
  30. wine - wine
  31. dessert - dessert
  32. strong tea - strong tea
  33. weak tea - weak tea
  34. cream - cream
  35. lump of sugar - sugar slice
  36. have three meals a day - eat 3 times a day
  37. meal - food (meal)
  38. for a starter - for a snack
  39. for the first course - on the first (dish)
  40. for the second course - to the second (dish)
  41. for the dessert - for dessert
  42. at the canteen (a cafe) - in the buffet (in the cafe)
  43. at a restaurant - in a restaurant
  44. at a bar (a pub) - in a bar (pub)
  45. taste - taste
  46. smell - smell
  47. pour- pour
  48. stir
  49. lay the table - set the table
  50. clear the table - remove from the table

Phrases:
  What about having a bite? “How about a snack?”
  What about asking for more? “What about asking for supplements?”
  Let’s drop into this small café. - Let's drop in this cafe.

Text 1. Read and translate.

For breakfast people may have eggs or an omelette. If eggs are boiled 2 or 3 minutes we call them soft-boiled eggs. If they are boiled 5 minutes or more we call them hard-boiled eggs. Some people don’t like eggs. They prefer porridge or semolina for breakfast. After porridge, eggs or an omelette people drink coffee or tea. I don’t like to drink strong tea or coffee. I prefer weak coffee with milk. My friend drinks coffee without milk. We always put some sugar into our coffee or tea. To make our coffee or tea sweet we put 2 or 3 spoonfuls of sugar and stir it with a tea-spoon.

  • spoonful - a teaspoon (what's in it)
  • tea-spoon - teaspoon

Exercise 1. Name the objects (utensils).

  1. spoon - spoon
  2. tea-spoon - teaspoon
  3. fork - fork
  4. knife - knife
  5. plate - plate
  6. dish - a dish
  7. bottle - bottle
  8. cup - cup
  9. saucer - saucer
  10. glass - glass
  11. mug - mug
  12. jug - jug
  13. kettle - kettle
  14. tea-pot - teapot
  15. sugar-basin - sugar bowl

Text 2. Read and translate.

Our mother always lays the table. She puts cups and saucers on the table. Then she pours out tea or coffee and puts tasty buns and sweets on the big dish, bread, butter and sometimes with cottage cheese. She calls us and says that breakfast is ready. We come to the kitchen and sit down at the table. The breakfast begins. My brother and I put three lumps of sugar into our cups and begin to stir our coffee with a tea-spoon. The lumps of sugar melt very quickly and the coffee becomes sweet. My brother likes to have coffee with milk but I prefer coffee without milk. If I can’t reach a bun I say "Pass me a bun, please." My mother passes me the bun saying "Here you are", and I thank her. As our mother wants us to eat well she often says, "Children, help yourselves to bread and butter or to some cottage cheese." When breakfast is over we clear cups and saucers away and wash them up.

Say some sentences about your breakfast.

Exercise 2. Answer the questions:

  1. Who cooks your breakfast?
  2. Who else has dinner with you?
  3. What kind of bread do you like best, white or brown?
  4. What do you cut bread with?
  5. What do you eat soup with?
  6. What did you eat for breakfast yesterday?
  7. Do you like strong or weak tea?
  8. Where do you keep your forks, knives, spoons, plates and cups?

Exercise 3. Comlete the sentences.

  1. Don’t eat off the ...
  2. Don’t talk with your ... full.
  3. In order to (to) lay the table we must put ...
  4. The salt is to far from me, ...
  5. What do you like best, an omelette or ...?
  6. When people want to drink they say, "We ...".
  7. We must ... before a meal and ... after it.

You can talk endlessly on the topic of delicious food and cuisine from around the world. We all love to have a meal somewhere in a cafe or cook something special at home. The topic of food and nutrition is always relevant - talking about food can unite even unfamiliar people and help maintain a conversation. Not all the same to talk about the weather :)

Today we’ll talk about vocabulary on the topic of “food” in English. About how food is called, what the British prefer, how to talk about food and of course, we will learn many new words about food in English with translation.

The British and the food. What do the British eat for breakfast, lunch and dinner

The British are known for their traditions and respect for history. Everyone knows that the British are very polite in communication: they are unlikely to push around in front of the bus, pushing everyone with their elbows in order to catch them on time. Rather, they will sincerely apologize if they accidentally hurt you on the street. The British as a nation honor and respect traditions, gladly follow them and instill love for them in the next generation. So with food - in the life of the British, it takes far from last place and many customs and everyday habits are associated with it.

What food habit will you think of when we talk about England? Of course about 5 o’clock tea!

From 4 to 6 in the evening in Britain comes "tea time." Usually the British drink black tea with milk and small sandwiches. The British can quite compete with the Chinese in the culture of tea drinking, because for them tea is not just a drink, but a whole ritual. In Great Britain they like tea very much and even joke good-naturedly on this subject.

According to the English, tea must be strong, hot, and sweet like woman’s kiss - Tea should be strong, hot and sweet, like a woman’s kiss.

A few idioms related to tea:

Not somebody "s cup of tea - Not his cup of tea (do not fall into anyone's area of \u200b\u200binterest)

To take tea with somebody - Drink tea with someone (have a relationship with someone, do business)

Nusband "s tea - husband's tea (very weakly brewed tea)

At breakfast, the British prefer a simple and hearty meal: oatmeal, scrambled eggs with bacon, toast with jam and, of course, tea or coffee.

Often you can find such a meal as brunch - it is formed by a combination of the words breakfast and lunch. It’s such a snack between breakfast and lunch, or just “lunch”.

A daily meal is called lunch. The most traditional meal for lunch is fish and chips (fish and chips). Fish and chips can be found anywhere in England, whether it is a gourmet restaurant or a food truck on the street. The British rarely eat pasta or rice. For sweet, they prefer warm apple pie (apple pie) or pudding (milk pudding).

Dinner (dinner) is much like a lunch in composition, only lighter. After dinner, before going to bed, the British can drink cocoa with light snacks. Such food is called supper before bedtime.

Expressions on eating in English:

Have breakfast

Have lunch - have lunch

Have dinner - have dinner

Have supper - eat before bedtime

Have (a) coffee / tea - drink coffee / tea

Have a meal - eat food

Have a snack - snack

Have a drink - drink

Shopping list: product names in English with translation

Before you go to the store for groceries for dinner, you should find out exactly where to go. In addition to the well-known supermarket, minimarket or grocery shop, there are specialized stores. What will be called a butcher shop or, for example, a pastry shop in English, see below:

Butcher’s - Butcher's Shop

Sweet / candy shop - pastry shop

Bakery - Bakery

Dairy - Dairy Store

Fishmonger’s - Fish Store

Greengrocer’s - Greengrocer

Health food store - health food store

Liquor store - liquor store

Delicatessen - gastronomic department

Produce - department of fruits and vegetables (in the supermarket)

Food and products in English with translation

It doesn’t matter if you went shopping at a supermarket (supermarket) or the nearest corner shop (a corner store) - you need to know what to buy. How will the different products be in English. We divide them into subtopics to make it easier to remember.

Meat

  • bacon - bacon
  • beef - beef
  • chicken - chicken
  • duck - duck
  • ham - ham
  • lamb - lamb meat
  • liver - liver
  • meat - meat
  • mutton - lamb
  • ox tongue - beef tongue
  • patridge - partridge
  • pork - pork
  • poultry - bird, game
  • sausage - sausage
  • tenderloin - filet, tenderloin
  • turkey - turkey
  • veal - veal
  • venison - venison

A fish

  • cod - cod
  • eel - eel
  • grouper - sea bass
  • herring - herring
  • mackerel - mackerel
  • pike - pike
  • pikeperch - zander
  • plaice - flounder
  • salmon - salmon
  • sardines - sardines
  • sole - marine
  • sturgeon - sturgeon
  • trout - trout

Vegetables

  • asparagus - asparagus
  • avocado - avocado
  • bean sprout - green beans
  • beans - beans
  • beet - beetroot
  • broccoli - broccoli
  • brussels sprout - brussels sprouts
  • cabbage - cabbage
  • carrot - carrots
  • cauliflower - cauliflower
  • chard - chard, leaf beets
  • chick pea - chickpea, turkish pea
  • cucumber - cucumber
  • eggplant / aubergine - eggplant
  • garlic - garlic
  • kohlrabi - kohlrabi
  • leek - leek
  • lentils - lentils
  • onion - onion
  • pea - peas
  • pepper - capsicum
  • potato - potato
  • scallion - chives
  • spinach - spinach
  • pumpkin / squash - pumpkin
  • sweet potato - sweet potato, sweet potato
  • turnip - turnip
  • zucchini - zucchini

Fruits, Berries and Nuts

  • almond - almonds
  • apple - apple
  • apricot - apricot
  • banana - banana
  • berry - berry
  • blackberry - blackberry
  • blueberry - blueberries
  • brazil nut - brazil nut
  • cashew - cashew
  • cherry - cherry
  • cranberry - cranberry
  • grape - grape
  • grapefruit - grapefruit
  • hazelnut - hazelnut
  • lemon - lemon
  • lime - lime
  • macadamia - macadamia nut
  • melon - melon
  • orange - orange
  • peach - peach
  • peanut - peanuts
  • pear - pear
  • pecan - pecan
  • pineapple - pineapple
  • pistachio - pistachios
  • plum - plum
  • raspberry - raspberries
  • strawberry - strawberry
  • tangerine / mandarin - mandarin
  • walnut - walnut
  • watermelon - watermelon

Cereals

  • barley - barley
  • buckwheat - buckwheat
  • grain - grain
  • lentil - lentils
  • pea - peas
  • pearl barley - pearl barley
  • rice - rice
  • semolina, manna groats - semolina
  • wheat - wheat

Milk products

  • butter - butter
  • cheese - cheese
  • condensed milk - condensed milk
  • cottage cheese - cottage cheese
  • cream - cream
  • cultured milk foods - fermented milk products
  • dried milk - milk powder
  • eggs - eggs
  • ice cream - ice cream
  • kefir - kefir
  • lactose - lactose, milk sugar
  • milk - milk
  • milk shake - milkshake
  • sheep cheese - sheep cheese
  • sour cream - sour cream
  • whey - whey
  • yogurt - yogurt

Desserts and sweets

  • bagel - bagel (pretzel made of yeast dough)
  • biscuit / cookie - cookie
  • box of chocolates - box of chocolates
  • bun / roll - bun
  • butterscotch / toffee- butterscotch
  • cake - cake, cupcake, cake
  • sweet / candy - candy
  • candy bar - chocolate bar
  • caramel - caramel
  • carrot cake - carrot cake
  • cheesecake - curd cake
  • chewing gum - chewing gum
  • chocolate - chocolate
  • chocolate bar - chocolate bar
  • cinnamon - cinnamon
  • cinnamon roll - cinnamon roll
  • cracker - cracker
  • croissant - croissant
  • cupcake - cupcake
  • custard - sweet custard
  • danish pastry - yeast puff pastry
  • dessert - dessert
  • flan - open pie with berries and fruits
  • fritter - deep-fried meat or fruit
  • frosting - frosting
  • frozen yogurt - frozen yogurt
  • gelato, ice cream - ice cream
  • gingerbread - gingerbread
  • granola - muesli
  • honey - honey
  • jam - jam; jam
  • jelly - jelly
  • lollipop - lollipop
  • maple syrup - maple syrup
  • marmalade - jam, marmalade
  • marshmallow - marshmallows
  • muffin - muffin
  • nougat - nougat
  • oatmeal cookie - oatmeal cookies
  • pancake - pancake, fritters
  • peanut butter - peanut butter
  • popcorn - popcorn
  • canned fruit - canned fruit
  • pretzel - pretzel
  • pudding - pudding
  • pumpkin pie - pumpkin pie
  • sponge cake - sponge cake, sponge cake
  • strudel - strudel
  • sugar - sugar
  • toffee - toffee
  • vanilla - vanilla
  • waffle - waffle

Soft drinks

  • coffee - coffee
  • juice - juice
  • carbonated water / sparkling water / club soda - water with gas
  • cream - cream
  • hot chocolate - hot cocoa
  • iced tea - iced tea
  • lemonade - lemonade
  • milkshake - milkshake
  • mineral water - mineral water
  • root beer - root beer, root beer (non-alcoholic carbonated drink on herbs)
  • soda - sparkling flavored water
  • soft drink - soft drink
  • still water - water without gas
  • tea - tea
  • water - water

Alcohol

  • red / white / rose wine - white / red / rose wine
  • cooler - an alcoholic cocktail, usually based on wine
  • beer - beer
  • bourbon whiskey - bourbon whiskey
  • champagne - champagne
  • sparkling wine - sparkling wine
  • cocktail - cocktail
  • eggnog - egg-based alcoholic drink
  • liqueur - liquor
  • mulled wine - mulled wine
  • scotch whiskey - scotch whiskey

When choosing food - pay attention to the packaging and the following labels:

  • caffeine free - caffeine free
  • decaf - decaffeinated (about coffee)
  • diet - does not contain sugar (about drinks)
  • fat free - low fat (about dairy products)
  • lean - low-calorie, lean (about products)
  • light - low in alcohol
  • low cholesterol - low cholesterol
  • low fat - nonfat (about dairy products)
  • no preservatives - no preservatives

Do not forget that in the supermarket you may need trolley or shopping-cart (food cart). After all purchases - go to cashier's desk (cash desk) to pay for goods.

Names of dishes in English with translation

Now that we know the main names of the products - it's time to talk about what you can cook from them at home or order in a restaurant.

Common dishes that can be found on the menu:

  • chop - meat on the bone
  • cutlet - cutlet
  • bacon and eggs - bacon with eggs
  • baked potatoes / jacket potatoes - baked jacket potatoes
  • boiled rice - boiled rice
  • burger - burger
  • eggs over easy - fried eggs on both sides
  • french fries - french fries
  • fried eggs / eggs sunny side up - fried eggs
  • fried rice - fried rice
  • grill - grilled meat
  • goulash - goulash
  • hash browns / hash brown potatoes / potato pancakes- potato pancakes
  • hot dog - hot dog
  • lasagne - lasagna
  • mashed potatoes - mashed potatoes
  • noodles - noodles
  • omelette / scrambled eggs - omelet
  • onion rings - onion rings
  • pasta - pasta
  • pizza - pizza
  • poached eggs - poached eggs
  • porridge - porridge
  • roast - meat fried over an open fire
  • roast goose - christmas goose
  • roasted vegetables - baked vegetables
  • sandwich - sandwich, sandwich
  • salad - salad
  • soup - soup
  • spaghetti bolognese - spaghetti bolognese
  • stew - stew
  • sirloin steak - boneless steak (large piece)
  • spare ribs - ribs
  • steak - steak
  • tempura - batter

In the restaurant we study the menu and find out what the main course is in the restaurant, which soup of the day is served and what is offered for dessert.

If you order meat, then remember that there are several degrees of readiness: with blood - rare; medium rare with blood - medium rare; full roast - well-done.

For meat, you can choose something from the wine list (wine list) or order a soft drink (soft drink).

Types of eateries where you can dine:

  • all-you-can-eat buffet - buffet-style snack buffet
  • buffet - buffet
  • cafe - cafe
  • coffee house - coffee shop
  • diner - an inexpensive snack bar, often located on the side of the road (found in American)
  • drive-through / drive-thru / drive in - a car eatery in which visitors make and accept an order without leaving their car
  • restaurant - restaurant

Here are some phrases that will help you make an order in a restaurant:

Can I have the menu, please? - May I have a menu, please?

Can I take your order? - May I accept your order?

Would you like something to drink? - Will you be any of the drinks? / Want something to drink?

What would you like for dessert? - What would you like for dessert?

I am not ready yet - I'm not ready yet (in response to the waiter's question, are you ready to place an order)

What is this dish? - What is this dish?

What do you recommend? - What do you advise?

What are your specialties? - What are your specialties?

I will have ... - I will ...

I would like ... - I would like ...

I will take this - I will take this

Could we have an extra chair, please? “May we have an extra chair, please?”

Could I see the wine list, please? “Can I see a wine map, please?”

Do you serve wine by the glass? “Do you have a glass of wine?”

Can I change my order? - Can I change my order?

Can I get this to go? “May I take this with me?”

Nothing else, thank you - Nothing else, thanks This is not what I ordered - This is not what I ordered

Can I get / have the bill / check, please? - Could I have the bill, please?

How much is the total? - How much is the total?

Does the bill include the service charge? - Are tips included in the bill?

I am paying for everyone - I pay for everyone

We are paying separately - We are paying separately.

Can I pay by card? - Can I pay by card?

Keep the change - No change needed / Keep change for yourself

Everything was great, I’ll come again - Everything was excellent, I will come again

Food idioms in English with translation

And finally, we’ll study a few well-established expressions and idioms in English that will help you to speak as a native speaker and understand the English even better.

Big cheese - big shot, important person (literally: big cheese)

To bring home the bacon - make money on a piece of bread (literally: bring home bacon)

A piece of cake - like two, two, easy (literally: a piece of cake)

To be as cool as a cucumber - calm as a boa constrictor (literally: be cool as a cucumber)

To be full of beans - energetic, groovy, full of strength (literally: be full of beans)

To buy a lemon - buy something unnecessary (literally: buy lemon)

Chew the fat - wash the bones (literally: chew fat)

Like two peas in a pod - two boots of steam, one field of a berry (literally: like two peas in a pod)

To eat a humble pie - humble yourself, swallow a grudge (literally: eat a humble pie)

Carrot and stick - carrot and stick (literally: carrot and stick)

To cry over spilt milk - grieve over trifles (literally: cry over spilled milk)

For peanuts - very cheap, for pennies (literally: for peanuts)

Go bananas - go crazy (literally doesn't translate)

Meal ticket - something that will provide a comfortable life, a source of income (literally: meat ticket)

Hot potato - a situation that can cause trouble (literally: hot potato)

Be in the soup - to be in a quandary (literally: to be in soup)

To polish the apple - earn someone's favor (literally: polish an apple)

To walk on eggs - be very careful (literally: walk in the balls)

Very often, before my new students, the question is: “How to talk? It seems to understand, I understand, but I can’t say anything. ”There is only one answer to this question: speak! A communicative approach to language learning is a good thing and has long been shown to be effective. And this is exactly what we are doing in the lessons on the practice of verbal communication. The lesson is based on questions and answers, various situations, role-playing games. Most of the lesson we are talking with students - discussing news, films, books, events, various lexical and grammatical topics. And when a student begins to try to speak English, then he realizes that he does not have enough vocabulary. Therefore, to help my students, I decided to develop manuals with vocabulary on topics. Moreover, each topic includes not only the most common words for every day, but also idioms, phrasal verbs, as well as stable phrases. Before each lesson, I send these manuals and ask, if possible, to learn as many words and phrases as possible. Then, we discuss a given topic, during which the student has a lot of opportunities to use the words that he taught the day before. Thus, work with words is going on and they are transferred from passive memory to active. I decided to gradually spread these manuals on topics on the blog, and I will only be glad if they come in handy for someone. You can work with them yourself or use in the lesson with your English teacher.

Vegetables

carrot carrot
aubergine eggplant
cauliflower cauliflower
onion bow
garlic garlic
leeks leek
broccoli broccoli
cabbage cabbage
cucumber cucumber
tomato a tomato
potato potatoes
courgette squash
spinach spinach
mushrooms mushrooms
beans beans
peas peas
pepper pepper
orange orange
banana banana
pear pear
grapes grape
strawberry strawberry
apple an Apple
lemon lemon
peach peach
melon melon
water melon watermelon
cherry cherry
kiwi kiwi
pineapple a pineapple
beef beef
lamb lamb
mutton mutton
venison venison
liver liver
kidneys the kidneys
veal veal
pork pork
bacon bacon
ham ham
chicken a hen
turkey turkey
duck duck
goose goose
curry curry
nutmeg nutmeg
cinnamon cinnamon
ginger ginger
tea tea
coffee coffee
fruit juice fruit juice
milk milk
beer (lager / ale) beer (light beer / ale)
wine wine
mineral water (sparkling / still) mineral water (with gas / without gas)
fizzy drink / carbonated drink / lemonade / pop * (Slang) / soft drink / soda (Am.Eng.) lemonade, carbonated drink
cider cider
spirits alcohol, spirits

Pop *   - means not only lemonadebut also all carbonated drinks, including champagne.

Since this is slang, the word "pop" can be translated into Russian.

Bakery Goods

tart open pie
pasty pie
pie closed cake
bread bread
bun bun, bun
Swiss roll jam roll
donut donut
muffin mini cupcake
meringue meringues
éclair eclair
cupcake corrugated cupcake

Miscellaneous

vinegar vinegar
(vegetable) oil vegetable oil
cake cake
(boiled / fried) egg (boiled / fried) egg
butter butter
soup soup
honey honey
sugar sugar
flour flour
salt salt
yeast yeast
a tin of sprats jar of sprat
a can of pop can of lemonade (pops)

Flavors and Tastes

bitter bitter
sour sour
hot acute
spicy spiced
sweet sweet
savory unsweetened (any taste other than sweet)
salty salty
bland fresh
tasty / Delicious delicious
tasteless tasteless
sickly sugary

Ways of cooking

boil cook
fry fry
bake bake
roast to roast
grill grill
season season with salt and pepper
cube / dice cut into cubes
slice cut into thin slices
chop chop
whip whisk
stir stir
steam soar
big cheese

e.g. I managed to talk to the big cheese himself.

big fish big shot
wine and dine

e.g. We were wined and dined every night and given the best hotel in town.

treat, feed-drink
butterfingers

e.g. What a butterfingers! You keep dropping things.

awkward, awkward, hacking, messy
cream of the crop

e.g. This is going to be a very important party. Cream of the crop will be there.

cream of society, the best of the best, important
cup of tea

e.g. Such shows are not my cup of tea.

smb. to your liking
use your noodle

e.g. Use your noodle to understand what’s going on!

move your brain, think
to be nuts about

e.g. I am nuts about Chinese food.

be a passionate fan of someone else /
a smart cookie

e.g. She is a smart cookie and always gets excellent grades.

smart, cunning, dodger
bring home the bacon

e.g. I need a job to bring home the bacon.

earn (for bread and butter)
to be in the soup

e.g. Oh no! I’ve broken mum’s favorite vase. Now I’m really in the soup.

get into trouble
a couch potato

e.g. Come on, let’s go out or you will turn into a coach potato.

homebody, lounger, couch potato
to be full of beans

e.g. I don’t want to sleep any more after that coffee, I am full of beans.

cheerful, energetic
a chicken

e.g. You are such a chicken if you are afraid to ask Elisabeth out.

cowardly
a lemon

e.g. This telephone is a real lemon! It keeps breaking down!

unusable thing

Collocations

Chinese / Mexican / Spanish food / cooking / cuisine chinese / Mexican / Spanish
light meal light meal / dinner
family meal family lunch / dinner
festive meal holiday lunch / dinner
substantial meal hearty lunch / dinner
ready meals ready meals
processed foods semi-finished products
hearty breakfast hearty breakfast
refreshing drink soft drink
die of hunger starve to death
have a quick snack have a bite to eat
perishable food perishable food product
junk food dry food; junk food
fresh produce fresh food
home-cooked food homemade food
food poisoning food poisoning

Hello! Already a lesson, we are engaged in the repetition of previously passed material, and this lesson is no exception. To thoroughly gain knowledge in our heads, it is necessary to repeat them regularly. Therefore, today we will repeat the vocabulary about the things that you want or need to buy. You will also learn so many new English words for the name of food. Name of food in English

Listen carefully to the English language of the Americans, repeat all the words in the media to learn to perceive English by ear and pronounce correctly all the expressions in American English.

Product Name in English

Using a table with “food” vocabulary in English and Russian, you will learn new material much faster, since the visualized information is much easier to remember.

Products
Nouns
breakfast breakfast
notebook notebook
a pen pen
soda water, sparkling water soda (a drink)
stereo system stereo
Nouns: food, food (Nouns: food)
banana banana
bread bread
broccoli broccoli
cereal, grain products cereal
biscuits cookie
egg egg
flour flour
fruit fruit
lemon lemon
lettuce lettuce
meat meat
milk milk
onion onion
orange orange
pizza pizza
salad salad
soup soup
sugar sugar
tomato a tomato
vegetable vegetable
Verbs (Verbs)
get sick to ache
eat, eat / eat, eat to eat / ate
Preposition
until until
Adjectives
cold cold
ready ready

Remember this table and then you can easily buy any food and food products in an American store.

Online pronunciation of vegetable names in English. Vegetables are an important part of any person’s diet. They contain carbohydrates and proteins, are the source, sometimes the only, irreplaceable biologically active substances. Possessing an alkaline reaction, vegetables neutralize acids that are formed when meat and flour dishes are consumed, deliver vitamins to the body, primarily vitamin C, as well as B1, B2, E, PP, K, provitamin A, and provide vital minerals: calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, sulfur, iron, nitrogen. They include enzymes and organic acids, fiber and pectins, which allow you to regulate digestion and the microflora of the gastrointestinal tract,

Meat products

Online pronunciation of meat product names.   Meat, like food, has always been known to mankind, at all times of its development, and often served as the basis for its survival in ancient times. The "energy reserve", which was provided by people with protein-rich meat food, elevated meat to the rank of one of the most widespread and revered products in the world.

Fast food

Online pronunciation of fast food in English   Fast food dishes exist in the national cuisine of various countries of the world (for example, Italian pizza). In 1921, the White Castle company opened in Kansas, whose specialty was hamburgers that were outlandish at the time. The steady price (5 cents until 1946) and curiosity attracted buyers, and doubts about the safety of the product were dispelled as a result of the cunning move of the company's owner Billy Ingram (when specially hired people in white coats created the impression that even doctors buy hamburgers). In the late 1940s, White Castle began to have competitors, of which McDonald’s became the most serious

Online pronunciation of fruit names in English. Fruit - a juicy edible fruit of a tree or shrub. Fruits are an important component of human food and many animals. In the Old Russian language, the word “fruit” did not exist, any fruits were called vegetables or ovoshts, the word “fruit” was borrowed in 1705.

Online pronunciation of berry names in English.   The benefits of berries are manifested due to their unique vitamin and mineral composition. Vitamins A and C act as antioxidants and protect cells from damage and premature aging. In berries there are many dietary fibers that stimulate metabolism. All berries contain a lot of potassium, which is very useful for the normal functioning of the cardiovascular system. Potassium is able to normalize high blood pressure, strengthen the heart muscle, and, together with antioxidant vitamins, strengthen blood vessels. There are a lot of sugars in the berries, which should also be taken into account when using them., you must comply with the norm (no more than 400 g of fruits and berries per day /)

Online pronunciation of drink names in English.   A drink (from hl. To nourish) is a liquid intended for drinking. Water - the basis of most drinks consumed by humans, is used both in pure and in carbonated or mineralized form (both extracted from natural mineral sources and with additives)

Sweets in English

Online pronunciation of names of sweets in English.   The first sweets appeared in ancient Egypt and Greece. Then they were desserts made from honey and fruits or dates. They also added nuts. Home-made sweets were distributed until the 20th century, they were prepared and sold wholesale and retail

Food

Online pronunciation of food names in English with transcription.   Oddly enough, numerous wars have become one of the incentives for the development of technologies for long storage of products. For example, Napoleon even announced a special competition for the invention of the best way to store food. After all, his army during long trips needed food. The French scientist Nicolas Francois Upper won this competition. It was he who decided to heat the products and then place them in hermetically sealed containers.

Nuts and seeds

Nuts and seeds - online pronunciation in English. In nuts, useful minerals - magnesium, potassium, calcium, iron, phosphorus, etc., are 2-3 times more than in many other food products. All varieties of nuts are rich in vitamins A, E, group B, P. In addition, nuts have another important advantage: all the nutrients in them are stored for a very long time, unlike, for example, vegetables and fruits that lose most of their vitamins and minerals during one winter.

Irish breakfast

Online pronunciation   titles irish breakfast ingredients   in English. Traditional an Irish breakfast consists of the following ingredients:   pork sausages, slices of bacon, eggs, black pudding, white sausage, tea or coffee and toast or traditional soda bread.

Chicken Egg Dishes

Online pronunciation   names of dishes made from chicken eggs in English. The taste of the egg depends entirely on the taste of the yolk., and the taste of the yolk - from what the chicken is fed. Homemade eggs are tastier than factory ones. To give the eggs a special flavor of the chicken, they are sometimes specially fed with spices.

What is an apple made of?

What an apple consists of - online pronunciation   in English with transcription. Apples have a low calorie content.   100 g of fresh apple contains only 47 kcal. The product is practically free of fat, however, it contains carbohydrates, which allows a person who has consumed an apple to maintain a feeling of satiety for a long time. Great for those who want to lose weight and those who are on a diet. 100 g of baked apples contain almost 66 kcal and also will not harm the figure. But in 100 g of dried apples 253 kcal, so you should not get involved in them if you want to maintain your weight.

B-B-Q

Online pronunciation   grilled foods. And barbecue, and barbecue - a celebration in the open. Americans call this type of recreation a barbecue, the British - a barbecue or grill, the Germans - a grill, and Russians - a barbecue.

Edible oils

Online pronunciation of oil names   in English with transcription and pronunciation in Russian letters. Oil is the collective name for a range of chemicals or mixtures of substances that are not soluble in water. There are three main groups of “oils”: some “oils” are fats, mineral oils are oil refined products

Sugar Honey Syrup

Online pronunciation   Names in English: sugar, honey, syrup. Sugar is the household name for sucrose. Cane and beet sugar is an important food product. Regular sugar refers to carbohydrates, which are considered valuable nutrients that provide the body with the necessary energy.

Seasoning spices

Online pronunciation names of seasonings used in cooking.   Man began to use aromatic and spicy plants for cooking long before salt. Today it is impossible to establish what exactly moved the ancient people: whether they wanted to improve the taste and smell of food, whether they tried to get new taste qualities of the usual dishes and products, or added spices knowing about their beneficial properties.

Milk products

Online pronunciation of dairy names   in English. From a large family of dairy products, sour-milk products are isolated - those that are produced by fermenting milk with various bacteria. So, yogurt is fermented with Bulgarian bacillus, acidophilus - acidophilic bacillus, rennet cheese - rennet, excreted from the stomach of calves, and the preparation of homemade yogurt and cottage cheese is possible due to the work of lactic acid lactococcus, which is constantly found in spontaneously fermented milk.

Fruit names in the plural.   Fruits are mainly digested in the intestines, not in the stomach. In addition, they are absorbed quite quickly (some in just an hour or less). Our brain “works” on glucose, and fruits are the best source of blood sugar.

Online pronunciation of names:   vegetables, fruits, berries and other foods in English with transcription, translation and pronunciation in Russian letters.