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At the Supermarket — American English Shadowing Practice

Practice natural American English for shopping at the supermarket. In this classic dialogue you shadow real lines like “How about baking some cookies today?”, “The recipe calls for flour, sugar, and butter.”, and “Why don't you get the dairy ingredients?”. It covers finding ingredients and dividing up shopping. You speak along with both roles, copying American rhythm, reductions, and everyday word choice so the exchange feels natural.

36 sentences
Hey, Julia, look at those desserts.

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What this dialogue trains

Make these lines automatic: “How about baking some cookies today?”, “The recipe calls for flour, sugar, and butter.”, “Why don't you get the dairy ingredients?”, “in the refrigerated section in the back”.

Language note: Suggestions (“How about…?,” “Why don't you…?”) and store/food vocabulary.

Say this vocabulary clearly: recipe, ingredients, dairy, aisle.

Copy the American intonation on “in the refrigerated section in the back” — natural delivery is the whole point of shadowing.

Learning goals

  • Handle shopping at the supermarket in natural American English.
  • Reproduce American rhythm, stress, and everyday phrasing.
  • Shadow both roles so you can start and respond.
  • Say key vocabulary clearly enough to be understood the first time.

About this practice

This is a classic everyday-conversation dialogue about shopping at the supermarket, widely used by American English learners.

At A1 level it is a short, complete scene you can shadow repeatedly.

Practice tips

  1. 1Shadow closely enough to copy American reductions and linking.
  2. 2Drill the vocabulary (recipe, ingredients, dairy) slowly, then at natural speed.
  3. 3Shadow both speakers so you can lead the conversation, not just reply.

Frequently asked questions

Is this American or British English?

American English — the dialogue models American pronunciation, rhythm, and everyday vocabulary.

What level is this dialogue?

A1. It's a short, natural everyday exchange rather than a textbook drill.

How do I make suggestions while shopping?

You practice “How about baking some cookies?” and “Why don't you get the dairy ingredients?”

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