Chocolate, English word, pronunciation: British [? t? kl? T], American [? t? ɑk? l? T], a noun and adjective, means "1. Chocolate, chocolate candy. Second, chocolate color. Third, the name, Chocolate ". When used as an adjective, it means "chocolate-colored. Chocolate flavored. "
Chocolate is a sweet food made of cocoa paste and cocoa butter as the main raw materials. It not only tastes delicate and sweet, but also has a strong aroma. Chocolate can be eaten directly, and can also be used to make cakes, ice cream and so on. On romantic Valentine's Day, it is an indispensable protagonist to express love.
Related sentences:
1 If you eat so much chocolate, you will get fat.
You'll? get? fat? if? you? eat? so? much? chocolate.?
2. As a snack, fruit is more beneficial to health than chocolate.
It's? healthier? to? snack? on? fruit? rather? than? chocolate.?
3. Don't give your child chocolate before dinner.
Don't? stuff? the? kids? with? chocolate? before? their? dinner.?
4. I ate chocolate cake until my throat was full.
I? was? stuffed? to? the? gills? with? chocolate? cake.?
The origin of English:
English belongs to the West Germanic branch of the Germanic family of Indo-European languages. It was first used by Britain in the Middle Ages and became the most widely used language in the world because of its vast colonies. The Anglo tribe, the ancestor of the British people, is one of the Germanic tribes that later migrated to the island of Great Britain, called England.
Both names come from Anglia in the Baltic Peninsula. This language is closely related to Frisian and Lower Saxon, and its vocabulary is influenced by other Germanic languages, especially Nordic (North Germanic), and is largely written in Latin and French. English has developed 1400 years.