ID de réservation
18541404
Quand ?
20th November 2025
Horaire ?
14:30pm - 16:00pm
Notes
SUBJECT/TOPIC : MONEY + CLOTHES
FEEDBACK/HOMEWORK:
Hi Azzedine,
Thank you for our last lesson.
Below you can find notes from our last discussion.
We will finish the buying clothes topic in our next class.
Thank you!
Money Vocabulary
Cheap – pas cher
Too expensive / overpriced – trop cher / prix trop élevé
Good value for money – rapport qualité-prix correct
Bargain – bonne affaire
Poor value for money – mauvaise affaire / rapport qualité-prix faible
Waste of money – gaspillage
Spend – dépenser
Save – économiser
Borrow / Lend – emprunter / prêter
Invest – investir
Win money – gagner de l’argent (lotto, concours)
Clothing Vocabulary
Coat – manteau
Jacket – veste
Raincoat / Winter coat / Trench coat / Top coat – différents types de manteaux
Shirt / T-shirt / Sweater / Hoodie / Blouse / Jeans / Trousers / Skirt / Dress / Shoes / Sneakers / Boots
Accessories – scarf, hat, belt, gloves, tie
Expressions with Money and Clothes
“It’s not worth it.” – ça ne vaut pas le prix.
“I’d like to buy this.” – J’aimerais bien acheter ceci.
“Do you have this in size 44 / in blue?”
“Can I pay by credit card / debit card?”
“How much does this cost?”
________________________________________
GRAMMAR NOTES
Countable vs Uncountable nouns (Money & Clothing)
Countable: coins, bills, items of clothing, shirts, shoes
How many coins do you have?
I bought three shirts.
Uncountable: money, cash, clothing (general), wool, cotton
How much money do you have?
I need some cotton for my sweater.
Much vs Many
Much → uncountable: How much money do you spend?
Many → countable: How many shirts do you own?
Some / Any
I have some cash.
Do you have any change?
Comparatives & Superlatives
This coat is cheaper than that jacket.
These shoes are the most expensive in the store.
Modal verbs for polite requests
Can I have this please?
Could you help me with this jacket?
________________________________________
PRONUNCIATION
Word
Pronunciation (IPA)
Notes
Money
/ˈmʌni/
Stress on first syllable
Cheap
/tʃiːp/
Long “ee”
Expensive
/ɪkˈspensɪv/
Stress on second syllable
Overpriced
/ˌoʊvərˈpraɪst/
Stress on last syllable
Jacket
/ˈdʒækɪt/
Stress on first syllable
Coat
/koʊt/
Long “o” sound
Sweater
/ˈswetər/
Stress on first syllable
Trench coat
/trɛntʃ koʊt/
Stress on first syllable of each word
Gloves
/ɡlʌvz/
“V” sound at the end