10 Phrasal Verbs for Food and Eating

55,287 views ・ 2017-12-08

Simple English Videos


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:01
So something very exciting has arrived in the post.
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It's a parcel full of British stuff.
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Vicki orders this box every year so that she has British foods and British goods for all
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our friends.
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Yes.
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It's lots of food that I can't buy in America.
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This lesson is about phrasal verbs that we use to talk about food and eating.
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A great way to learn the meanings of phrasal verbs is to see them in action and so we’re
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going to play a game.
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Watch us unwrapping our parcel and see how many phrasal verbs you can spot.
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You’ll hear ten that are connected with food.
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Ready?
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OK, so first one.
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Here we go.
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What do you think, Jay?
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Oh my goodness!
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I know what's in here.
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These are what you call 'sweets'.
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That's right.
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And you call them candies.
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Candies.
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01:09
And these are chocolate, right?
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Yes.
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They're chocolate.
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Oh wow.
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I can't wait to have some.
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No, you're not having any because you've got to cut down on chocolate.
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01:18
Oh no.
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Yeah, you eat too much of it.
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OK, next one.
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I'm going to give them to our friends.
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Next one.
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Baked beans!
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Now this is really very interesting.
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This company, Heinz, is based in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, three hundred and fifty miles
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from where we are in Philadelphia.
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Yeah, but the American baked beans that you can buy in the stores here have too much sugar,
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I think.
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So Vicki gets her baked beans imported from the United Kingdom.
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You can snack on them any time you like.
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They're great.
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I like them too.
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OK, what have we got next?
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Oooo.
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I love these.
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I could live on them.
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Can you see them?
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I can see them.
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What are they?
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Pickled onions.
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Pickled onions.
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Yeah.
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How strange!
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I've given you these before.
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They're lovely.
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And they're just onions that have been pickled in vinegar.
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02:24
[sigh] When I say 'pickle' what do you think of?
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Well, a pickle to me is a small cucumber that's been kept in brine or vinegar.
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That's a pickle.
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OK.
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We call that a gherkin.
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And our pickles are things like this.
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Like this is Branston pickle.
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It's a bit like a chutney.
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But it's not a pickle at all!
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My English friends will wolf this down.
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You can use it to make ploughman's lunches.
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A ploughman's lunch.
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Yeah.
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Bread, cheese and Branston pickle.
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OK.
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OK.
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Next thing.
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Mmmhmm.
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It's gravy granules!
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OK, now gravy is like a sauce that we serve with meat, and English people love gravy.
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I mean I love gravy on chicken and on beef, but one of these says onion gravy.
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Yeah, it goes well with sausages.
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Hmm.
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OK.
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Next one.
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Errr.
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Oh, and speaking of gravy, something similar.
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I've got some lamb stock cubes.
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Now this is also very interesting.
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This company makes stock cubes and you can find them on the shelves of American stores.
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But not lamb stock cubes.
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Americans don't buy those.
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And so for Vicki, who makes wonderful lamb dishes, for them to be just as wonderful as
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I like them, she has to have lamb stock cubes.
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How many of these packages did you buy?
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Errr, nine.
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I didn't want to run out.
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Good thinking.
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OK.
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Next one?
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Mmhmm.
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Right.
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Oh, you're going to like this one, Jay.
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Look.
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Mince pies.
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These are little sweet pies that have got...
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Do you know what's inside them?
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I think there's some jam and some nuts and some f.....?
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It's currants and sultanas and dried fruit, and they're lovely.
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So here's a very interesting thing.
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'Mince' in British English refers to meat that has been chopped up, like you would make
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hamburgers with.
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You call it 'chopped meat'.
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Chopped meat, right.
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OK.
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So when first I heard the term 'mince pies', I assumed there was chopped meat in it.
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No.
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They're sweet, and they go very well with custard.
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I think we've got some... ha ha... custard!
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Here we go.
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This is what I'll serve up with the mince pies.
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I'll serve it warm.
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I love it when you pour warm custard over mince pies.
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It is delicious.
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OK.
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Ready for another one?
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Yes.
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Yes.
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OK.
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I think we're getting near the end now.
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But hang on.
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What's this?
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Aha!
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Tada!
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Oh, Christmas crackers.
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OK.
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These are not crackers you eat.
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They're made of paper and I need to make another video about these too because they're full
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of jokes and hats and things like that.
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I'll give you a hint.
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When you pull them apart they go 'boom!'.
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That's right.
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They blow up.
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No, they don't blow up.
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But they do make a popping noise.
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A bang.
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A bang.
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Great!
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OK.
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Well, I'm ready for Christmas now.
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Well, wait a minute.
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06:11
Oh, what's that?
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More mince pies, right?
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We're going to pig out on them.
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I don't know if we can finish this.
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I'm sure we can.
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We'll get our friends to polish them off if we can't.
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Perfect.
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06:26
What a great idea.
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The first one was cut down.
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If you cut down on a particular food then you reduce the amount you consume.
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For example, I’m trying to cut down on sugar so I lose weight.
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Yes.
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They're chocolate.
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Oh wow.
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I can't wait to have some.
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No, you're not having any because you've got to cut down on chocolate.
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Oh no.
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Yeah, you eat too much of it.
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We can also say cut out – but that means stop eating or consuming something completely.
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People often try to cut out caffeine or sugar or bread and carbs.
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OK, next one.
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Snack on.
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Now a snack is a small amount of food that we eat between meals, often when we’re in
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a hurry.
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So when we snack on something, we eat a small amount of something as a snack.
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So Vicki gets her baked beans imported from the United Kingdom.
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You can snack on them any time you like.
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They're great.
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I like them too.
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Baked beans are a nice snack, but I wouldn’t want to live on them.
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Pickled onions on the other hand are wonderful.
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They’re so good, I think I could live on them.
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To live on is when you only eat one food, or you eat a lot of it.
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Oooo.
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I love these.
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I could live on them.
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Can you see them?
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OK, next one.
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Now a wolf is an animal – it’s a member of the dog family.
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But what about wolf down?
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This is all about speed.
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If you wolf down your food you eat it very fast.
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Perhaps because you’re hungry, or you’re in a rush, or maybe you just like the food
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so much that you eat it very fast.
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But it's not a pickle at all!
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My English friends will wolf this down.
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Next one.
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If different foods taste good when you serve them together then they go well together.
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Syrup goes well with pancakes.
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And peaches and ice cream go well together.
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The combination works.
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09:01
I mean I love gravy on chicken and on beef, but one of these says onion gravy.
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Yeah, it goes well with sausages.
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Hmm.
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Next one.
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If we run out of something, we use it up so it’s finished, and we don’t have any more
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left.
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I don’t want to run out of lamb stock cubes.
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She has to have lamb stock cubes.
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How many of these packages did you buy?
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Errr, nine.
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I didn't want to run out.
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Good thinking.
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Next one.
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Perhaps you know the verb chop.
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When we chop food, we cut it into small pieces.
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But we also say chop up and it means the same thing.
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Why don’t we just say chop?
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I don’t know.
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Sometimes English is tricky
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like that.
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'Mince' in British English refers to meat that has been chopped up, like you would make
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hamburgers with.
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You call it 'chopped meat'.
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Chopped meat, right.
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OK.
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So we can say ‘chop’ or ‘chop up’ and the next verb is similar.
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We can say 'serve' or 'serve up'.
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Waiters serve us in a restaurant when they give us our food or drink.
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And when we're talking about eating at home, we’ll often say serve up - it’s when we
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give food to someone as part of a meal.
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I think we've got some... ha ha... custard!
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Here we go.
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This is what I'll serve up with the mince pies.
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I'll serve it warm.
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OK, we’re near the end now.
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Just two more.
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Pig out means to eat a very large amount of food all at once.
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Probably too much.
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You’ll feel very full if you’ve pigged out.
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It’s informal, so you can use this verb with close friends, but probably not people
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you don’t know very well.
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Oh, what's that?
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More mince pies, right?
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We're going to pig out on them.
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And the last one.
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Now 'to polish' means to make something shiny and smooth by rubbing it.
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We might polish a floor.
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But polish off has a completely different meaning.
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It means to have the last of some food, so to eat what’s left and finish it.
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Again it’s informal.
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I don't know if we can finish this.
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I'm sure we can.
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We'll get our friends to polish them off if we can't.
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Perfect.
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What a great idea.
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Now there was just one other phrasal verb you heard that wasn’t about food.
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It was when we were talking about the Christmas crackers.
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Did you spot it?
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Tell us in the comments if you did.
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And what did you think of these English foods?
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Would you like to try some?
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Let us know.
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We love hearing from you.
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Have a great week everyone and see you next Friday.
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