Drinks Vocabulary in English

Drinks Vocabulary in English
Free LessonsCore VocabularyDrinks Vocabulary
Lesson 28 Beginner

Drinks Vocabulary in English

In this lesson, you will learn the names of common drinks in English, how to talk about what you like to drink, and useful phrases for offering, requesting and describing drinks in everyday situations.

Vocabulary Daily Life Social Skills
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Lesson Explanation

Drinks are part of every conversation about food, hospitality and daily life. In English, we use the verb “to drink” for all liquids, but there are also specific verbs — “to sip” (to drink slowly in small amounts) and “to gulp” (to drink quickly in large amounts).

When offering a drink to someone in English, we say:

“Would you like something to drink?” — formal
“Can I get you a drink?” — friendly
“Do you want a cup of tea?” — casual

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Pro Tip: In British culture, offering tea is a sign of hospitality — “Shall I put the kettle on?” means “Shall I make some tea?” It is one of the most common phrases in British daily life!

Hot Drinks

DrinkMeaningExample
Tea شاي I have a cup of tea every morning and evening.
Coffee قهوة She can’t start the day without a strong coffee.
Green tea شاي أخضر I switched to green tea — it’s very healthy.
Herbal tea / Mint tea شاي أعشاب / شاي نعناع Mint tea is very popular in North Africa.
Hot chocolate شوكولاتة ساخنة She loves hot chocolate on cold winter nights.
Espresso إسبريسو He always orders a double espresso after lunch.
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Cold Drinks

DrinkMeaningExample
Water ماء Drink at least eight glasses of water a day.
Sparkling water مياه غازية I prefer sparkling water with my meals.
Orange juice عصير برتقال Freshly squeezed orange juice is the best!
Apple juice عصير تفاح The children love apple juice.
Lemonade ليموناضة / عصير ليمون A cold lemonade is perfect on a hot summer day.
Smoothie عصير فواكه مخفوق I make a banana and strawberry smoothie every morning.
Soft drink / Soda مشروب غازي I try to avoid soft drinks — too much sugar!
Milk حليب My children drink a glass of milk before bed.
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Offering & Requesting Drinks

SituationWhat to Say
Offering formally Would you like something to drink?
Offering casually Can I get you a drink? / Do you want a cup of tea?
Accepting Yes please, I’d love a cup of tea. / That would be lovely!
Declining politely No thank you, I’m fine. / Not for me, thanks.
Asking for water Could I have a glass of water, please?
Describing preference I’d like it with milk, please. / No sugar for me, thanks.
Saying you are thirsty I’m really thirsty — could I get some water?
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Example Dialogue

Welcoming a guest at home

Ahlem Welcome, Emma! Please come in. Can I get you something to drink?
Emma Thank you so much! A cup of tea would be lovely, if that’s okay.
Ahlem Of course! Do you take milk and sugar?
Emma Just a little milk, please — no sugar for me. Thank you!
Ahlem Here you go. I also made some mint tea — it’s very popular here in Algeria.
Emma Oh how lovely! I’d love to try it. I’ve heard it’s delicious.
Ahlem I hope you enjoy it! And there are some biscuits too — help yourself.
Emma This is so kind of you. The mint tea is amazing — thank you!
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Practice Exercise

1. How do you offer a drink to a guest formally?
2. “Shall I put the kettle on?” means ______.
3. You don’t want sugar in your tea. What do you say?
4. Which drink is popular in North Africa and made with fresh leaves?
✅ 1. B — Would you like something to drink?  |  ✅ 2. C — Shall I make some tea?  |  ✅ 3. C — No sugar for me, thanks.  |  ✅ 4. C — Mint tea
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Listen and Repeat

Listen to the pronunciation of the drinks vocabulary:

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