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  2. bar lácteo - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/bar-lácteo.199861

    Es que en Gales todavía hay milk bars que son un resto del movimiento anti alcohol - son cafes donde no se sirven bebidas que tengan alcohol. Hace un mes tomé un sandwich en un national milk bar en Llanidloes.

  3. a loaf of bread / a ... of cheese - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/a-loaf-of-bread-a-of-cheese.766404

    A clean, sound, heated product made by pulveriziing and blending, with the aid of heat and water, with or without salt, one or more lots of cheese into a homogeneous, plastic mass. It is reported that one-half of all cheese made in this country is marketed as loaf or process cheese-American Cheddar, Swiss, Brick, Limburg, Camembert.

  4. Is there some/any/...milk in the fridge? | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/is-there-some-any-milk-in-the-fridge.2673324

    1."There isn't some milk in the fridge." 2."There isn't any milk in the fridge." 3."There isn't milk in the fridge." I think only sentence #2 is correct, am I right? You are right, and one reason is that while "not any" (especially when said as "isn't any" or "aren't any") is common and natural in English, "not some" is not common or natural ...

  5. carton / pot / container of yoghurt [yogurt] - WordReference...

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/carton-pot-container-of-yoghurt-yogurt.854648

    If I heard a carton of yoghurt it would suggest an unusual, probably square and quite likely large (ie milk-carton-looking) container. Carton is cardboard, at least partially, and it's the word used for milk containers which are not bottles (bottles are nowadays usually plastic, but can be glass). Generally: pot of yoghurt. carton/bottle of milk.

  6. carton of milk / 'box' of milk | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/carton-of-milk-box-of-milk.2957829

    Jan 22, 2015. #1. First of all, I know is called a carton of milk. (top-roofed shape) And dictionary says can be called a juice box/drink box. (in British English, it’s also a carton.) Then we have , this is called a brick carton. (Merriam Webster says so.) Meanwhile, Americans call a box of corn flakes.

  7. have milk for breakfast / have milk with breakfast

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/have-milk-for-breakfast-have-milk-with...

    Not necessarily. It can mean that your breakfast consists only of milk, and that you don't drink anything else or eat anything at all. But it can also mean that you drink milk, without saying anything about what you might eat. It also doesn't mean you don't drink anything else, for example orange juice. You might drink both. While "with milk ...

  8. Yoghurt - countable or uncountable - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/yoghurt-countable-or-uncountable.3388248

    English (Singapore/UK), basic Chinese. Nov 8, 2017. #5. Yogurt is naturally uncountable. It only becomes countable in a restaurant/café or meal context when you are talking about servings ('We'll have two frozen yogurts please') or in a shopping situation (as lingobingo said). You tend to hear milk shake used countably more often because it ...

  9. Saucer of milk, table two. - WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/saucer-of-milk-table-two.3525651

    Catty originated at a time when some people thought that when women fought with each other, it resembled a cat fight. A woman who says something mean about another woman is sometimes described as being catty. Cats like milk. Requesting a saucer of milk after a woman says something mean about another woman is a way to say you think she's acting ...

  10. pour in vs. pour | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/pour-in-vs-pour.2219471

    English - South-East England. Aug 10, 2011. #2. 'In' and 'into' have the same function here: showing where the milk goes. If she pours milk into the bowl, she's pouring milk in. (You can say just 'in' if the bowl has already been mentioned.) However, you could also say 'she poured some milk' without indicating where it goes.

  11. Fall Down / Fall over. | WordReference Forums

    forum.wordreference.com/threads/fall-down-fall-over.3122952

    Oct 26, 2006. #4. If you fall down, you fall in a heap. If you fall over you pass out, and tend to hit the ground still stretched-out-- still in a standing position, so to speak. Falling over is also called keeling over, and it's common to say "right over" with both words.