I'd like some bread: I want some bread, please give me some bread.
key words:
1. would like
English [wud laik]? Beauty [w? d la? k] ?
yes.
2. some
English [s? m] ? Beauty [s? m] ?
some; Someone; About; Quite a few.
pron. some; Several; Part of it; (used when the quantity is uncertain) Some people.
very; Quite; < Beauty > A little.
3. bread
English [brewed]? Beauty [br? d] ?
bread; Food; Nutrition, nutrients; Livelihood
spread bread crumbs on ...
Example:
I'd like some bread and milk for breakfast.
I want some bread and milk for breakfast.
Extended information:
bread basically means bread, fluffy baked cakes, food, nutrition and, by extension, livelihood, livelihood and money.
bread is a noun of matter, which means that there is no plural form when expressing the concept of pure matter. If you want to express quantity, you must use the unit of measurement with simple and complex form before it, plus the structure of of, such as: Aloaf [slice, piece] of, Loaves [slices, pieces] of. a? Bread can also refer to a piece of bread or a kind of bread. Breads refers to multiple servings of bread or multiple breads.
Word collocation of bread:
1. Bake bread to bake bread.
2. butterbread spreads cream on the bread.
3. crumb bread breaks the bread.
4. cut bread to cut bread.
5. live by bread lives on bread.