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Learn everyday English through the topic of cooking and food.
Get bonus English lessons here: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/profile/jda-industries-inc/subscribe
In this episode, we talk about breakfast routines, snacks, quick meals, go-to dinners, grocery shopping, and even washing up. You’ll get natural listening practice plus lots of useful phrases that you can use to describe your own daily life in English.
We keep things conversational and practical so you can build real-world fluency while enjoying a relaxed chat about food.
In this episode, you’ll learn how to:
Useful phrases from the episode:
Breakfast and habits
Snacks and cravings
Quick meals, leftovers, and takeout
Go-to meals and cooking style
Grocery shopping
Cooking and washing up
Talking about likes and dislikes
Reflect and practice
If you could only eat one meal for the rest of your life, what would you choose? Use the phrases from this episode to describe your own breakfast, snacks, and dinner routines in English.
Chapters:
(00:00) Learn English Podcast Intro
(00:48) Breakfast
(04:11) Snacks and Snacking Habits
(08:26) Quick and Easy Meals
(09:16) Leftovers and Takeout Culture
(11:44) Cooking from Scratch vs. Instant Meals
(15:15) Grocery Shopping Tips
(20:30) Cleaning Up and Final Thoughts
In this lesson, you’ll learn natural adjective + preposition combinations such as afraid of, interested in, angry about, excited about, addicted to, and more. These structures are essential for fluent and natural English, but most learners struggle with them because you simply have to learn them through examples and patterns, not rules.
Below, you’ll find all the key phrases and example sentences from the lesson so you can review them, repeat them, and add them to your sentence-learning routine.
Want to be able to think in English freely? Listen to this next: https://open.spotify.com/episode/2ghgRn40AS2BeHJNN5BJvS?si=JtONR5i3ROqij-eNyTaG2g
Learn 30 phrases about emotions: https://open.spotify.com/episode/27ASOVrQexjGZfPeI1huJr?si=flGLmYsTRrqeAosaBMU3pQ
Phrases and examples from the lesson:
Afraid of
• I’m afraid of the dark.• I’m afraid of going outside when it’s dark.
Interested in
• I’m really interested in photography at the moment.• I’m not really interested in watching any more of that show.• He didn’t seem very interested in what we proposed.
Angry about
• I’m angry about what you did.• He’s angry about not being able to see his friends.
Ashamed of
• I’m ashamed of what I did.• I’m ashamed of what the company is doing at the moment.
Aware of
• Not that I’m aware of.• Be aware of your surroundings when you go downtown at night.
Good at / bad at / fantastic at / terrible at / amazing at
• Try and get good at speaking to strangers to help you improve your English.• I’m bad at keeping in touch with people at the moment.• He’s really good at listening to people when they speak.• She’s amazing at explaining things in a simple way.
Certain about
• I’ve never been so certain about something in my entire life.• Are you certain about that?• I’m not completely certain about it, but let’s just do it anyway.
Content with
• I’m not content with the state of our house at the moment.• I’m content with staying in tonight.
Busy with
• I’m so busy with work right now.• They seem really busy with their new restaurant at the moment.
Smart of / stupid of
• That’s not very smart of you.• It was stupid of him to say that.• How stupid of you. What were you thinking?
Addicted to
• I think I’m addicted to coffee.• Kids are addicted to screens these days.
Excited about
• She’s so excited about going to the party later.• He doesn’t seem that excited about it.• I was really excited about going to the pool.
Sad about / happy about
• We’re so sad about what happened.• Are you happy about your new job?
Disappointed with / pleased with
• I’m really disappointed with how you are acting at the moment.• I’m so pleased with you.• Are you pleased with your progress this year?
Overwhelmed with / overwhelmed by
• I’m overwhelmed with all the work I have to do right now.• I was overwhelmed by all the cleaning I had to do.
Use the phrases in the description to review, repeat, and build your own personalized sentence list.
If you enjoyed this lesson, watch the next video on your screen and keep practicing English in a natural, sentence-based way.
In this English listening‑practice lesson we’re focusing on how to invite someone, make plans, and set dates; from a quick coffee to a full night out.
You’ll master natural phrases for casual and formal invitations, learn how to suggest activities without sounding pushy, and discover polite ways to check someone’s availability.
By the end, you’ll have new vocabulary, better listening skills, and the confidence to set up plans like an English speaker.
Get all lessons here: https://open.spotify.com/show/43Oj7EOZGHmtNQxRoXw8HX?si=d00937c80ebc477e
📌 Key Phrases from This Lesson
✅ “Would you like to grab a coffee this weekend?” – friendly, informal way to suggest meeting up for coffee
✅ “Would you like to grab lunch this weekend?” – same structure, but for a meal
✅ “Do you fancy going for a drink on Friday?” – British‑English invite, often with a romantic vibe
✅ “Would you like to do this?” – polite, flexible invitation when plans aren’t fixed yet
✅ “I was thinking we could go to that show this weekend?” – sharing an idea while gauging interest
✅ “Want to do something this weekend?” – very casual American way to propose hanging out
✅ “Let’s get together soon.” – open‑ended suggestion without committing to a date
✅ “How about we try that new restaurant on Saturday?” – ‘How about…’ to put forward a concrete plan
✅ “What if we tried that new Italian restaurant?” – ‘What if…’ to float a suggestion and invite feedback
✅ “Why don’t we try it?” – concise ‘Why don’t we…’ proposal for any activity already mentioned
✅ “Why don’t we try that new Italian restaurant?” – specific version of the above, naming the plan
✅ “Should we go for a walk tonight?” – ‘Should we…’ to ask if the other person thinks it’s a good idea ✅ “Should we go for a walk if it’s not raining?” – adding a condition to the suggestion
✅ “Why don’t we check out that new gallery everyone’s talking about?” – inviting someone to a popular event
✅ “Let’s do something fun like bowling.” – enthusiastic ‘Let’s…’ plus an example activity
✅ “Let’s have a catch up next week.” – arranging a future meeting to talk and reconnect
✅ “Should we do this next week?” – checking the other person’s schedule for a postponed plan
✅ “Maybe next time.” – polite way to decline or postpone an invitation without closing the door