This document provides language for offering and requesting food and drink, and responding to requests. It includes common phrases like "Do you want some more?" and "Can I have some..., please?" as well as responses like "Of course" and "Here you are." It also notes how words like "so" and "really" can be used to strengthen adjectives and some verbs when describing food preferences.
This document provides language for offering and requesting food and drink, and responding to requests. It includes common phrases like "Do you want some more?" and "Can I have some..., please?" as well as responses like "Of course" and "Here you are." It also notes how words like "so" and "really" can be used to strengthen adjectives and some verbs when describing food preferences.
This document provides language for offering and requesting food and drink, and responding to requests. It includes common phrases like "Do you want some more?" and "Can I have some..., please?" as well as responses like "Of course" and "Here you are." It also notes how words like "so" and "really" can be used to strengthen adjectives and some verbs when describing food preferences.
Unit 12, Lesson 3: Offering and requesting food and drink;
responding to requests Offering food and drink Do you want some more? Would you like some…? What would you like to eat / to drink? What would you like for dessert?
Requesting food and drink
Can I have some…, please? Please pass the... I'd like the…, please. Do you have…?
Responding to requests Of course. Here. / Here you are. All right. / OK. We have…
Using “so” and “really” to make words stronger
Use so or really before adjectives to make them stronger. Use really before some verbs to make them stronger, for example: like, love, don't like, need (to), want (to), have to.