🍎 Fruits & Vegetables: some & any in English
A fully interactive A1 Teens grammar-and-vocabulary lesson on food. Students learn ten common fruits and vegetables, the key difference between countable food (apples, carrots) and uncountable food (milk, rice), and the core rules for some and any: some for positive (+) sentences, any for negatives (–) and questions (?). The lesson also introduces 'How many?' for countable and 'How much?' for uncountable food. It includes a warm-up, step-by-step grammar boxes with a countable/uncountable food grid, a positive/negative/question rules table and a quick memory-tip chip set, a 10-word key-vocabulary table, an original 'Saturday at the market' reading text with hover-tooltip glossary words, six review flashcards, an 8-item fill-in-the-blanks practice with live scoring, a paired speaking task with a model dialogue, a 50–70 word writing task with checklist and auto-save, and an 8-question multiple-choice quiz with per-question explanations and a tiered result screen.
Lesson Plan
- 4 reflection questions about the student's favourite fruits and vegetables and the food in their kitchen
- Silent thinking or pair-share format — no writing required
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Countable food can be counted (one apple, two apples); uncountable food cannot (milk, rice).
- Use 'some' in positive (+) sentences: There are some apples.
- Use 'any' in negative (–) sentences: There aren't any apples.
- Use 'any' in questions (?): Are there any apples?
- Use 'How many?' with countable food: How many carrots are there?
- Use 'How much?' with uncountable food: How much milk is there?
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