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【Vocabulary List 2025.12.14】The Takeout Chronicles
副总编 二十三级
1楼 发表于:2025-12-14 13:42

This post gives some useful vocabulary about the topic "The Takeout Chronicles"


Try to use it in our topic!
副总编 二十三级
2楼 发表于:2025-12-14 13:44
 
副总编 二十三级
3楼 发表于:2025-12-14 13:44

Vocabulary Helper: The Takeout Chronicles


Part 1: Ordering Food

   Takeout / Takeaway: Food you buy from a restaurant to eat somewhere else.

   Delivery: Food that is brought to your home or office.

   To order: To ask for and pay for food.

   Menu: The list of food and drinks you can choose from.

   To browse: To look at the menu or options without hurry.

   Dish: One specific type of food you order (e.g., curry, pasta).

   Cuisine: A style of cooking from a country or region (e.g., Italian cuisine, Chinese cuisine).

   Combo meal: A set that includes a main dish, a side, and sometimes a drink.


Part 2: About the Food

   Appetizer / Starter: A small dish you eat before the main meal.

   Main course / Entree: The biggest and most important part of the meal.

   Side dish: A smaller food that comes with the main course, like fries or salad.

   Dessert: Sweet food you eat at the end of a meal.

   Spicy: Food with a hot, strong taste from peppers.

   Savory: Food that is not sweet; tasty and often salty.

   Sweet and sour: A common taste mix, both sugary and a little sharp.

   Leftovers: Food that you did not finish eating during the meal.


Part 3: Delivery Process

   Delivery fee: The extra money you pay for the service of bringing the food.

   Minimum order: The smallest amount of money you must spend to place an order.

   Delivery time / ETA: The time when your food is expected to arrive. (ETA = Estimated Time of Arrival)

   To track an order: To check the map or status to see where your food is.

   Delivery driver / rider: The person who brings your food.

   Contactless delivery: The food is left at your door without meeting the driver directly.

   Packaging: The box, bag, or container the food comes in.

   Utensils: Tools for eating, like chopsticks, forks, knives, and spoons.


Part 4: Paying and Reviewing

   Cart: The online list where you put the food you want to buy.

   Total: The final amount of money you need to pay.

   Coupon / Discount code: A special number or word that lets you pay less money.

   To tip: To give a driver extra money as a thank you (optional in some places).

   Receipt: The paper or digital note that shows what you bought and paid.

   Review: Your opinion about the food or service that you write online.

   Rating: Giving a score, often from 1 to 5 stars.

   To complain: To tell the company that something was wrong with your order.


Part 5: Common Phrases

   To place an order: To finish choosing and pay for your food.

   Food is on the way: The food has been sent and is coming to you.

   My order arrived: My food is here.

   Something is missing: A dish or item you ordered did not come.

   The food is cold/greasy/soggy: Common ways to say the food's condition was not good.

   It was worth it: It was good, and the price was fair.

   A waste of money: It was not good, and paying for it felt bad.

 
副总编 二十三级
4楼 发表于:2025-12-14 13:44

Advanced Vocabulary Guide: The Takeout Chronicles


Category 1: Ordering & Logistics

   To place an order: To finalize and submit your food selection for purchase.

   Dispatch: The process of sending out your order from the restaurant for delivery.

   Logistics: The detailed organization and implementation of the delivery operation.

   Real-time tracking: The ability to see the live location of your delivery on a map.

   Scheduled delivery: Arranging for your order to arrive at a specific, pre-set time.

   Subscription model: A service where you pay a recurring fee for benefits like waived delivery charges.


Category 2: Food Description & Quality

   Gourmet: High-quality, sophisticated, and often more expensive food.

   Artisanal: Food made in a traditional, non-industrial way, often by hand.

   Palatable: Food that is pleasant or acceptable to taste.

   Bland: Lacking strong flavor; not spicy, salty, or sweet enough.

   Overpriced: Considered too expensive for the value or quality provided.

   Portion size: The amount of food served in a single order.

   Presentation: The way the food is arranged and looks when it arrives.


Category 3: Technology & Platform Experience

   Interface: The visual layout and design of an app or website where you interact.

   Algorithm: A set of rules that determines what restaurant or dish suggestions you see.

   User experience (UX): How easy and pleasant an app or website is to use.

   Digital payment: Paying with methods like credit cards, e-wallets, or online banking.

   In-app promotion: A discount or special offer available only within the application.

   Customer retention: The strategy of keeping existing users loyal to the service.


Category 4: Economics & Social Impact

   Convenience fee: A charge added for the service of providing easy access and delivery.

   Markup: The amount added to the restaurant's price by the platform.

   Gig economy: A labor market based on short-term contracts (e.g., delivery riders).

   Carbon footprint: The total greenhouse gas emissions caused by an activity, like delivery.

   Ubiquitous: Seeming to be found everywhere; extremely common.

   Socioeconomic factors: Social and economic influences, like income or location, that affect choices.

   Cultural assimilation: The process where elements of one culture (like food) become adopted by another.

 
副总编 二十三级
5楼 发表于:2025-12-14 13:44

Advanced Lexicon: The Takeout Chronicles


Domain 1: Socio-Cultural & Behavioral Analysis

   Ubiquity: The state of being everywhere at once, describing the pervasive presence of delivery services.

   Normalization: The social process through which ordering takeout becomes an unquestioned, standard behavior.

   Instant gratification: The desire to experience pleasure or fulfillment immediately, a key driver of the delivery economy.

   Culinary democratization: The widening access to diverse food options, irrespective of one's cooking skill or location.

   Social atomization: A potential negative effect where increased reliance on individual delivery undermines communal dining experiences.

   Homogenization: The trend towards standardization, where global platform algorithms may reduce local culinary diversity.


Domain 2: Economic & Operational Models

   Monetization strategy: The method by which a platform generates revenue (e.g., commissions, fees, subscriptions).

   Price elasticity: The degree to which demand for delivery changes in response to price fluctuations (e.g., increased fees).

   Externalities: Costs or benefits borne by society not reflected in the market price, such as environmental impact of packaging.

   Precarious labor: Employment characterized by instability, lack of benefits, and insecurity, often associated with gig work.

   Supply chain optimization: The coordination of restaurant preparation, dispatch, and routing to maximize efficiency.

   Predatory pricing: A controversial strategy of setting prices below cost to eliminate competition, potentially used by large platforms.


Domain 3: Consumer Psychology & Critique

   Decision fatigue: The deteriorating quality of decisions after a long session of choosing, relevant when browsing extensive menus.

   The paradox of choice: The theory that an abundance of options can lead to anxiety and dissatisfaction.

   Conspicuous consumption: The act of purchasing goods or services to publicly display economic power, sometimes reflected in premium orders.

   Cognitive dissonance: The mental discomfort experienced when holding conflicting beliefs, e.g., valuing sustainability while accumulating packaging waste.

   Hedonic adaptation: The tendency to return to a stable level of happiness despite positive changes, making the novelty of constant delivery wear off.

   To exercise agency: To make a conscious, deliberate choice, as opposed to passive consumption dictated by algorithms.


Domain 4: Sustainability & Systemic Impact

   Linear economy: The traditional "take-make-dispose" model of resource use, contrasted with a circular economy.

   Single-use plastics: Items designed to be used once then discarded, constituting a major portion of delivery waste.

   Carbon emissions: Release of greenhouse gases from transportation and production, contributing to the carbon footprint of delivery.

   Urban logistics: The planning and control of the flow of goods within a city, heavily impacted by delivery vehicles.

   Regulatory framework: A system of rules and laws designed to govern platform operations, labor conditions, and environmental standards.

   Ethical consumption: The practice of making purchasing decisions based on moral and social considerations, such as fair labor and environmental practices.

 

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