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Valentin
Articles before names of dishes in restaurants
Mostly every day every one of us can see the menu of McDonald's (yeah, it's fast food but it works here as well) or a menu of any restaurant (French, American, Italian, etc.). There no articles:
For instance, McDonald's:
Hamburger,
French fries,
Coke
The question is...do I need to pronounce articles before the names and add "s" to plural dishes? For example: I'd like a hamburger, a diet coke and 2 french fries? Should I do the same in more expensive restaurants with some french names?
1 de jul de 2017 15:40
Respostas · 5
An interesting question! You wouldn't say two French fries, because that would mean just two small pieces of potato: you'd say two portions of fries, or (more casually) two lots of fries. Generally, I'd say the basic rule of countable and non-countable nouns applies: you say 'I'll have a glass of white wine' (countable) but 'I'll have white wine' (non-countable); 'I'll have a chicken sandwich' but 'I'll have chicken'. With non-countable nouns, you'd normally use no article (I'll have cheese souffle) but you might add a definite article (I'll have the Chicken Kiev) - the definite article referring to that particular item on the menu.
1 de julho de 2017
I think the answer is different in fast food restaurants compared to fancier restaurants.
At McDonald's, it would be normal to say "I'd like a hamburger, a Coke, and two orders of fries." It would sound weird to say "I'd like THE hamburger."
But in fancier restaurants, it is normal to say "the" before the name of a dish, like in Giancarlo's example: I'll have the calamaris al ajillo, please. But you would still say I'd like a Coke, not "the" Coke, even in a fancy restaurant.
1 de julho de 2017
I'd say yes, if you want to sound proper.
You can also use "the".
For example, I'll have the calamares al ajillo, please.
1 de julho de 2017
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Valentin
Habilidades linguísticas
Inglês, Japonês, Português, Russo
Idioma de aprendizado
Inglês, Japonês, Português, Russo
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