Talking about snacks

Learning Easy English

2025-10-03

6 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Introduction Beth and Neil have a real conversation in easy English about snacks – the small bites of food they have between meals. Learn to talk about fruit, nuts, crisps and chocolate bars! Vocabulary snack small thing that we eat between meals snack on (phrasal verb) eat a little bit of something over a period of time junk food food that is bad for our health guilty pleasure something we enjoy even though we know it's bad for us Transcript Beth Hello and welcome to Real Easy English. In this podcast, we have real conversations in easy English to help you learn. I'm Beth.   Neil And I'm Neil. Why not watch a video version of this podcast on our website so that you can read the subtitles as you listen? That's at bbclearningenglish.com.   Beth Hello, Neil. How are you?   Neil I'm very well. How are you, Beth?   Beth I'm very good, thank you. I am quite hungry, though.   Neil Yeah, it's nearly lunch. And before we came in here, I had a little snack.   Beth Oh, what did you have?   Neil I had an apple.   Beth That's very healthy. And interestingly, today we are talking about snacks. They are the small things that we eat between meals. I could really do with a snack because it's not quite lunchtime. So, you had an apple before we started this podcast – do you have snacks often?   Neil I do have snacks often. I like snacks. But snacks can be healthy or unhealthy. So, I had an apple – that makes me sound very good. I do like to have an apple for a snack, but I also like unhealthy snacks too.   Beth Do you have some unhealthy snacks with you today at work?   Neil I think I have a chocolate bar.   Beth Ooh!   Neil And maybe some crisps.   Beth No other fruit?   Neil I do – I have an orange.   Beth Oh, you've got loads of snacks!   Neil I always bring a box of snacks to work.   Beth Yeah, I do the same. I have some rice cakes with me today. And I also have a little oat bar, and the oat bar – in my head, I like to think it's healthy, like a healthy snack, but it's probably full of sugar.   Neil Mmm. When you're not at work, do you have a favourite kind of snack when you're just hanging around at home?   Beth This will make me sound very healthy, but I really like eating frozen fruit. So, for example, in my freezer, I have frozen mango, frozen grapes, frozen pineapple, frozen berries. And I like to put them in a glass, and I give them a wash, and then I just eat the frozen fruit. And it's a very... It's a good snack after dinner, if I'm still a bit hungry but I shouldn't have something a bit naughty – so, then I have some fruit. That's a good snack. So, if you're at home, what kind of snacks do you have?   Neil Well, it depends. I like to have a snack when I'm... If I'm preparing a meal, sometimes I like to have a nibble of maybe crisps, or nuts, olives – that kind of thing.   Beth Nice. You don't snack on the food you're making while you're making it?   Neil No, I just taste the food that I'm making.   Beth OK.   Neil So, by the time it's ready, often I'm full.   Beth That's very silly! So, you have healthy and unhealthy snacks. Generally, is it good to snack, do you think?   Neil I think, actually, it's not very good to snack. I think your stomach needs a rest – needs a break between meals. So, eating all the time is not very good for you, I think.   Beth Mmm. It's quite easy as well to snack on junk food because a lot of the snacks out there – if you go to the supermarket and you see snacks, they might look healthy but they're not. They are junk food. They're really bad for you. Like the oat bars that I have – the oats are good but, like I said, the rest of the ingredients are definitely not healthy.   Neil Do you have a guilty pleasure for a snack?   Beth It used to be biscuits. Biscuits were my guilty pleasure. I would try not to eat them but I would anyway. But I don't really eat biscuits anymore. I'm not sure I have a guilty pleasure now. Do you?   Neil I think eating biscuits late in the evening is a bad habit and a guilty pleasure, because if you're watching a film or something on TV, it's quite nice to have biscuits with your tea or something.   Beth That's true. OK. Let's recap the language we heard during the conversation. We had snack – and a snack is a small thing that you eat between meals.   Neil We also use snack on something – that's a phrasal verb, and it means to eat a little bit of something over a period of time. So, for example, I snack on peanuts while I'm cooking.   Beth Some snacks are junk food – that is food that is bad for us.   Neil If a food is a guilty pleasure, we enjoy it even though we know it's bad for us.   Beth That's it for this episode of Real Easy English. You can learn more phrasal verbs for eating with Georgie's series Phrasal Verbs with Georgie. Find it on our website: bbclearningenglish.com.   Neil And you can also find a free worksheet on our website to practise what you've heard in this podcast. Thanks for joining us and goodbye.   Beth Goodbye.   Now try this... Download a free worksheet.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Hello and welcome to Real Easy English.

  • In this podcast, we have real conversations in easy English to help you learn.

  • I'm Beth.

  • And I'm Neil.

  • Why not watch a video version of this podcast on our website so that you can read the subtitles as you listen?

  • That's at bbclearningenglish.com.

  • Hello, Neil.

  • How are you?

  • I'm very well.

  • How are you, Beth?

  • I'm very good, thank you.

  • I am quite hungry, though.

  • Yeah, it's nearly lunch.

  • And before we came in here, I had a little snack.

  • Oh, what did you have?

  • I had an apple.

  • That's very healthy.

  • And interestingly, today we are talking about snacks.

  • They are the small things that we eat between meals.

  • I could really do with a snack because it's not quite lunchtime.