Chocolate meaning in English
Learn how to use Chocolate correctly with Gymglish.
Test and improve your English. Start your free trial today.
TEST YOUR ENGLISH
Free trial and no commitment to buy
4,7 on App Store, Play Store and Trustpilot
More than 8 million learners worldwide
Definition
chocolate: a sweet food made from cocoa and sugar
(These) chocolates (are delicious!): (These) sweets, candies (are delicious!)
Examples
- "I'm sure you'll find the job as gratifying as I found picking up your soiled tissues and discarded chocolate wrappers for the past decade as your special assistant."
- "This weekend's tough, will there be chocolates?"
- "You open your mouth real wide, and I see if I can hit it with one of these tasty little chocolates."
- "Do you need some chocolate?"
- "Will there be chocolates?"
- "She'll be there at the end of the day, around 6:00 pm. I suggest that you clean up your so-called "love nest": champagne bottles, chocolates and mood music might give Miss Stake the wrong impression."
- "Just like you didn't know if I was going to have a strawberry milkshake or chocolate milkshake!"
- "Chocolate melted and poured into your mouth by trained chimpanzees"
- "The ticket is on your desk, along with a chocolate."
- "I've slipped a little box of chocolates under your door to apologise for the lack of wine."
- "May I suggest that next time you go to bed, go easy on the chocolate liqueurs."
- "Virgos like chocolate ... and movies ... and personal independence... and -"
- "12 coffees brewed per second, 94 mails archived per minute, 6-10 chocolates fed to Bruno per hour."
- "Trey and I are playing mouth-basketball with these delicious chocolates Bruno brought back from France."
- "The policy is on your desk, along with some chocolates."
- "Sugar-free cookies (for those of us who cannot eat chocolate cake)"
- "Also, I left some chocolate in your top drawer."
- "But could you ask them NOT to leave those little chocolates on the pillow?"
- "Bob : How did you know I love chocolate cakes?"
- "When you drop the report off, bring some chocolate with you too, okay?"
Still unsure of the best way to use 'Chocolate'? Improve your English thanks to our online English lessons. We offer a free test as well as a free level assessment!
What our users say:
Test your English with Gymglish today and get a free level assessment
Absolutely free - no strings attached.
