Learn everyday language for markets, supermarkets, cafés, and restaurants: food vocabulary, prices, polite requests, and grammar for a/an, some/any, this/that/these/those, and **count/non-count** nouns.
Listen and read:
A: Hello. Can I have a bottle of water and some apples?
B: Sure. How many apples?
A: Two, please. How much are these bananas?
B: They’re $1.50 a pound. — A: Great, I’ll take them.
Market/supermarket items, café/restaurant words.
Count: an apple, two eggs · Non-count: rice, milk, bread.
Use a/an with singular count nouns; use no article or a partitive with non-count:
a loaf of bread, a bottle of water.
Affirmative: some (I need some milk.) · Negative/Questions: any (Do you have any rice? We don’t have any eggs.)
Near: this (sing.), these (pl.) · Far: that (sing.), those (pl.).
“How much is this apple?” — “Those bananas are $1.50.”
How much is/are…? · How many…? · Can I have…? · I’d like… · That’s all, thanks.
Write questions/answers for the items:
In pairs, Student A is the customer; Student B is the shop assistant. Use polite requests and prices.
Customer: “Good morning. I’d like two bananas and a loaf of bread. How much are these?”
Assistant: “They’re $1.50. Anything else?”
Customer: “That’s all, thanks. Can I have a receipt?”
Replace links with your real file paths. Keep them relative (e.g., ../assets/).