FRUIT
FRUIT
Read the new vocabulary carefully – then make sentences with them
This is an apple – this apple is green ( eg)
The asparagus is next to the artichoke and it’s green
Remember that these students are lack of vocabulary and grammar don’t make them learn much new
thing
Make sure to fix their pronunciation
Blackberry fig
cantaloupe or rockmelon or muskmelon
cherry grapes green olive lemon
Tomato watermelon
berry (noun): any small juicy fruit with many tiny seeds like a strawberry - We went
out to pick berries, but we ate them all on the way home.
citrus fruit (noun): a fruit with lots of Vitamin C like an orange or lemon - Sailors
took citrus fruits on long voyages to make sure they got enough Vitamin C.
dried fruit (noun): fruit that's had water removed from it, like raisins - I like breakfast
foods that have dried fruit in them, like muesli.
fruit (noun): part of a plant that has seeds or a stone and is eaten raw when ripe
- People used to eat fresh fruit between meals, but these days they eat candy bars and
donuts instead.
melon (noun): a large round fruit with a hard skin and soft flesh inside - There were
many different melons at the market, so we got a watermelon and a cantaloupe.
stone fruit (also drupe) (noun): a fruit with soft flesh around a large stone, like a
plum or peach. - Be careful if you're picking stone fruits because they can bruise if
you drop them.
ripe (adjective): (of fruit only) ready to eat after growing to full size - If a papaya's
still green, it isn't ripe yet, so wait until it turns yellow or orange.
temperate fruit (noun): any fruit that only grows in a cool or cold climate - Many
temperate fruits like apples are hard, but most tropical fruits are soft.
tropical fruit (noun): any fruit that grows in a warm, tropical climate - My favourite
tropical fruit is the durian. It tastes like heaven!