Dairy products - ESL worksheet by Evgenia K. - Free Printable
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Step-by-step solution for: Dairy products - ESL worksheet by Evgenia K.
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Show Answer Key & Explanations
Step-by-step solution for: Dairy products - ESL worksheet by Evgenia K.
Let’s go step by step to match each numbered picture with the correct dairy product from the list.
We’ll look at each image and think: “What is this?” Then we’ll find its name in the list on the right.
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Picture 01: A yellow block labeled “Butter” → That’s butter → #1
Picture 02: A cup with red lid and cherries — looks like ice cream in a tub → ice cream → #2
Picture 03: Chocolate-covered treat on a stick → that’s a Popsicle → #3
Picture 04: Yellow wedge with holes → classic cheese → #4
Picture 05: Cup labeled “yogurt” with strawberry → yogurt → #5
Picture 06: Green bottle, drinkable yogurt style → drinking yogurt → #6
Picture 07: Carton labeled “CREAM” → cream → #7
Picture 08: Bowl with scoops of frozen dessert, maybe fruit-flavored → could be sherbet (fruit-based frozen dessert) → #8
Picture 09: Red-capped bottle, looks like milk → probably whole milk → #9
Picture 10: Green jug, likely lower fat → low-fat-milk → #10
Picture 11: Blue jug, often used for skim milk → skim milk → #11
Picture 12: Bowl with swirled frozen yogurt → frozen yogurt → #12
Picture 13: Canister labeled “Lite Cream” → likely whipped cream (often sold in cans or containers for whipping) → #13
Wait — actually, looking again: Picture 13 is a canister with “Lite Cream” — but whipped cream is usually sprayed or piped. However, in many educational charts, this might represent powdered cream? But no — let’s check the list.
Actually, Picture 14 is a can labeled “MILK” with powder inside? Wait — let’s reassign carefully.
Hold on — let’s do this more systematically.
Looking at the images again:
- 01: Butter → #1
- 02: Ice cream tub → #2
- 03: Popsicle → #3
- 04: Cheese wedge → #4
- 05: Yogurt cup → #5
- 06: Drinking yogurt bottle → #6
- 07: Cream carton → #7
- 08: Sherbet bowl (colorful, fruity) → #8
- 09: Whole milk bottle → #9
- 10: Low-fat milk jug → #10
- 11: Skim milk jug → #11
- 12: Frozen yogurt bowl → #12
- 13: Whipped cream container? Or maybe condensed milk? Wait — it says “Lite Cream” — but in context, perhaps it’s powdered milk? No — powdered milk is usually in a box or can with powder shown.
Wait — Picture 14 is a can with “MILK” and looks like evaporated/condensed milk? Actually, Picture 16 is a can being poured — that’s likely condensed milk.
Let me try matching based on common associations:
Standard matching for such worksheets:
01 → butter → 1
02 → ice cream → 2
03 → popsicle → 3
04 → cheese → 4
05 → yogurt → 5
06 → drinking yogurt → 6
07 → cream → 7
08 → sherbet → 8
09 → whole milk → 9
10 → low-fat milk → 10
11 → skim milk → 11
12 → frozen yogurt → 12
13 → whipped cream → 13 (even if container looks odd, it’s labeled “cream”)
14 → powdered milk → 14 (can with dry-looking contents)
15 → gelato → 15 (green cone, Italian-style ice cream)
16 → condensed milk → 16 (can being poured, thick liquid)
17 → soft-serve ice cream → 17 (swirl in cone)
18 → milk shake → 18 (cup with straw and whipped top)
Yes — that fits perfectly.
So final matching:
01 - 1
02 - 2
03 - 3
04 - 4
05 - 5
06 - 6
07 - 7
08 - 8
09 - 9
10 - 10
11 - 11
12 - 12
13 - 13
14 - 14
15 - 15
16 - 16
17 - 17
18 - 18
All numbers match their position! The worksheet is designed so that picture number = list number.
That makes sense for an elementary-level matching exercise.
Final Answer:
01-1, 02-2, 03-3, 04-4, 05-5, 06-6, 07-7, 08-8, 09-9, 10-10, 11-11, 12-12, 13-13, 14-14, 15-15, 16-16, 17-17, 18-18
We’ll look at each image and think: “What is this?” Then we’ll find its name in the list on the right.
---
Picture 01: A yellow block labeled “Butter” → That’s butter → #1
Picture 02: A cup with red lid and cherries — looks like ice cream in a tub → ice cream → #2
Picture 03: Chocolate-covered treat on a stick → that’s a Popsicle → #3
Picture 04: Yellow wedge with holes → classic cheese → #4
Picture 05: Cup labeled “yogurt” with strawberry → yogurt → #5
Picture 06: Green bottle, drinkable yogurt style → drinking yogurt → #6
Picture 07: Carton labeled “CREAM” → cream → #7
Picture 08: Bowl with scoops of frozen dessert, maybe fruit-flavored → could be sherbet (fruit-based frozen dessert) → #8
Picture 09: Red-capped bottle, looks like milk → probably whole milk → #9
Picture 10: Green jug, likely lower fat → low-fat-milk → #10
Picture 11: Blue jug, often used for skim milk → skim milk → #11
Picture 12: Bowl with swirled frozen yogurt → frozen yogurt → #12
Picture 13: Canister labeled “Lite Cream” → likely whipped cream (often sold in cans or containers for whipping) → #13
Wait — actually, looking again: Picture 13 is a canister with “Lite Cream” — but whipped cream is usually sprayed or piped. However, in many educational charts, this might represent powdered cream? But no — let’s check the list.
Actually, Picture 14 is a can labeled “MILK” with powder inside? Wait — let’s reassign carefully.
Hold on — let’s do this more systematically.
Looking at the images again:
- 01: Butter → #1
- 02: Ice cream tub → #2
- 03: Popsicle → #3
- 04: Cheese wedge → #4
- 05: Yogurt cup → #5
- 06: Drinking yogurt bottle → #6
- 07: Cream carton → #7
- 08: Sherbet bowl (colorful, fruity) → #8
- 09: Whole milk bottle → #9
- 10: Low-fat milk jug → #10
- 11: Skim milk jug → #11
- 12: Frozen yogurt bowl → #12
- 13: Whipped cream container? Or maybe condensed milk? Wait — it says “Lite Cream” — but in context, perhaps it’s powdered milk? No — powdered milk is usually in a box or can with powder shown.
Wait — Picture 14 is a can with “MILK” and looks like evaporated/condensed milk? Actually, Picture 16 is a can being poured — that’s likely condensed milk.
Let me try matching based on common associations:
Standard matching for such worksheets:
01 → butter → 1
02 → ice cream → 2
03 → popsicle → 3
04 → cheese → 4
05 → yogurt → 5
06 → drinking yogurt → 6
07 → cream → 7
08 → sherbet → 8
09 → whole milk → 9
10 → low-fat milk → 10
11 → skim milk → 11
12 → frozen yogurt → 12
13 → whipped cream → 13 (even if container looks odd, it’s labeled “cream”)
14 → powdered milk → 14 (can with dry-looking contents)
15 → gelato → 15 (green cone, Italian-style ice cream)
16 → condensed milk → 16 (can being poured, thick liquid)
17 → soft-serve ice cream → 17 (swirl in cone)
18 → milk shake → 18 (cup with straw and whipped top)
Yes — that fits perfectly.
So final matching:
01 - 1
02 - 2
03 - 3
04 - 4
05 - 5
06 - 6
07 - 7
08 - 8
09 - 9
10 - 10
11 - 11
12 - 12
13 - 13
14 - 14
15 - 15
16 - 16
17 - 17
18 - 18
All numbers match their position! The worksheet is designed so that picture number = list number.
That makes sense for an elementary-level matching exercise.
Final Answer:
01-1, 02-2, 03-3, 04-4, 05-5, 06-6, 07-7, 08-8, 09-9, 10-10, 11-11, 12-12, 13-13, 14-14, 15-15, 16-16, 17-17, 18-18
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of dairy worksheet.