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Countable and Uncountable Nouns Kitchen Shopping Roleplay Discussion

This document provides a list of foods, drinks, kitchen items and cooking equipment to help roleplay a discussion about grocery shopping for a new kitchen. It includes categories like meat, vegetables, seafood and condiments. Measurement terms are also provided to discuss quantities of items.

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Maria Victoria
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
321 views3 pages

Countable and Uncountable Nouns Kitchen Shopping Roleplay Discussion

This document provides a list of foods, drinks, kitchen items and cooking equipment to help roleplay a discussion about grocery shopping for a new kitchen. It includes categories like meat, vegetables, seafood and condiments. Measurement terms are also provided to discuss quantities of items.

Uploaded by

Maria Victoria
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Countable and Uncountable Nouns- Kitchen Shopping Roleplay Discussion

You have just moved into a new house and have nothing in the kitchen. Suggest things
below that you need to buy. If your partner agrees on that try to also agree on how much
or how many you need (adding -s to any words that need it).

Alcohol (cider/ hard cider, cocktail, lager, liqueur, rice wine, spirit, stout, vodka)
Asian food and drink (bamboo shoot, bean curd, beansprouts, bonito flake, chewy rice
cake, Chinese dumpling/ dim sum, pot noodle, fishcake, fish sauce, fried rice, lotus
root, miso soup, pickled plum, pork bun, powdered green tea, prawn cracker, red bean
jam, rice cracker, rice porridge, sesame oil, soy sauce, spring roll, rice wine vinegar,
water chestnut)
Condiment/ Seasoning (barbecue sauce, bay leaf, black pepper, brown sauce, chili
pepper, chili sauce, curry powder, English mustard, French mustard, ginger, gravy
powder, herb, MSG/ monosodium glutamate, oil, pickle, salad dressing, salt, sesame
seed, stock cube, vinegar)
Cooking equipment (carving knife, deep fat fryer, grater, kitchen knife, non-stick
saucepan, salad bowl, skewer, toothpick, wok)
Crockery (bowl, dish, mug)
Cutlery (chopstick/ disposable chopstick)
Dairy food (blue cheese, butter, duck egg, egg, full-fat/ skimmed milk, parmesan
cheese, quail egg, yoghurt, whipped cream)
Dessert/ Sweet (biscuit/ cookie, cake/ cakes, chocolate/ chocolates, crme caramel,
croissant, custard powder, Danish pastry, honey, ice cream, ice lolly, pancake mix)
Fruit (apple, apricot, cherry, mandarin/ Satsuma/ tangerine, pear, plum, watermelon)
Hot drink (black/ green tea, herb tea, hot chocolate)
Ingredient for baking (brown sugar, flour, margarine)
Meat (bacon, beef, chicken breast, chicken leg, chicken wing, chop, cutlet, duck, fillet,
hamburger patty, heart, horse, kidney, lamb, liver, meat ball, mince, mutton, pt, pork,
sausage, tongue, tripe, turkey, veal, wild boar)
Mexican food (kidney bean, nacho, taco, tortilla, salsa)
Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com 2015

Seafood (cod, crab, eel, fish, fish egg, jellyfish, mackerel, octopus, prawn/ shrimp,
scallop, salmon, sea urchin, seaweed, sardine, shellfish, squid, tuna)
Snack (chestnut, crisp/ chip, peanut, walnut)
Soft drink (drinking yoghurt, energy drink, fruit juice, fizzy drink/ soda, fizzy water, iced
tea/ iced barley tea, soy milk)
Staple/ Starchy food (bread, bread roll, cereal, chip/ French potato, brown/ white rice,
croquette, flour, instant mashed potato, noodle, pasta)
Vegetable (aubergine/ egg plant, cabbage, carrot, cauliflower, courgette/ zucchini,
cucumber, garlic, grape, green bean, green pepper, lettuce, mushroom/ champignon,
onion, pea, pickled, potato, pumpkin, soy bean, spinach, spring onion, sweet potato)
White good (fridge/ refrigerator/ cool box, cooker/ stove, dishwasher, microwave/
microwave oven, kettle, oven, oven toaster, rice cooker)
If you need to or your teacher tells you to, use the quantities on the next page to help with
your discussion.

Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com 2015

a couple (of)
a few (of)
a little (of)
a lot (of)/ lots (of)
a/ an
bag
block
bottle
box
bunch
can/ tin
carton
cc
cube
cup
drop
glass
gram
(half) a dozen
jar
kilo
leaf
litre
loaf
not many/ much
packet
pinch
quite a lot (of)
segment
sheet
slice
some
splash
tablespoon
teaspoon
tub
Find at least ten foods etc above which can go in each of these questions:
How many do we need?
How much do we need?
Which category above is countable and which category is uncountable? Which of those
categories can be followed by s?
Find ways to talk about amounts and quantities above which only go with one of those two
categories.
Can you find food etc above which can be both countable and uncountable? Which is
more common in each case?
Written by Alex Case for UsingEnglish.com 2015

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