In the following groups of words there are two which do NOT go with the noun at the end. Write the words below. Escríbe las palabras de cada columna que no guardan relación con el
nombre final (de mayor tamaño y en negrita).
fizzy
tender
fast
nice
soft
nice
frozen
cheap
tough
rare
pork
frozen
alcoholic
delicious
vegetarian
fish
cool
medium-rare
fizzy
wonderful
frozen
tough
disgusting
delicious
well-done
alcoholic
take-away
expensive
hot
well-done
Indian
vegetarian
delicious
vegetarian
tasty
Indian
drink
steak
food
restaurant
Ejemplo: 'a tough drink'
(no tiene sentido)
'a tough
steak' (sí que tiene sentido)
Cold, cool or
frozen?
'Cold' (frío) indica una temperatura más baja y más desapacible que
'cool'(fresco). 'Frozen' es el pretérito de 'freeze' (congelar) y puede emplearse además
de para referirnos a alimentos y productos congelados, también para
indicar una temperatura extremadamente baja.
It's freezing in here! / Hace muchísimo frío aquí!
Match the following fruits and vegetables with the pictures.
Tomato-Fruit
or vegetable?
It depends on who you ask, a botanist or a horticulturist.
Botanically speaking, the tomato is a fruit. So is a watermelon, green pepper, eggplant, cucumber, and squash. A "fruit" is any fleshy material covering a seed or seeds.
Horticulturally speaking, the tomato is a vegetable plant. The plant is annual and non-woody. Most fruits, from a horticulture perspective, are grown on a woody plant (apples, cherries, raspberries, oranges) with the exception of strawberries.