The English for ice cream is ice cream, and the pronunciation is [? Answer? s kri? m].?
Express meaning: ice cream; An ice cream.
Part of speech: usually used as a noun in a sentence, such as subject or object.
Fixed collocation: ice cream sandwich ice cream sandwich; Ice cream sandwich; Ice cream sandwich; Ice cream sandwich system.
Example: people are shopping and buying? Ice? Cream? For their children, as they do every Sunday.
People walk and buy ice cream for children, just as they do every Sunday.
The use of ice cream
By looking at the specific usage of ice cream in a sentence, we can know whether it belongs to countable nouns or uncountable nouns in this sentence. If it refers to abstract ice cream, it is an uncountable noun; If it refers to one or two ice creams, it is a countable noun.
Ice cream means abstract ice cream or quantifiers have been put in front of it, which is an uncountable noun. When it comes to ice cream, it is a countable noun. If you only buy ice cream balls, there is no cone. If you want to eat a cone, you can say ice cream cone, cone and kon originally mean cone, which means cone is very vivid.
Bilingual example:
The little boy ate several plates of ice cream.
That? Boy? Eat? How many? Dishes? Yes? Ice? Cream. ?
I ate two plates of ice cream.
Me? Eat? Two? Food? Yes? Ice? Cream. ?
As far as I'm concerned, I don't care whether the ice cream is made in Italy or England.
Personally think? Me? Can't you? Really? Care? Less? Is it? That? Ice cream? Coming? From where? Italy? Or? England.
He sucked ice cream soda through a straw.
What? Rotten? Ice cream? Soda? Through? Answer? Straw ?