Maria: Yay! Thank you, Rory, for your answers. So dear listeners, we are growing vegetables and fruits. This is a brand new topic. We haven't had it before. So yeah. Is it strange for you?
Rory: Well, it would be strange for me to grow anything.
Maria: Yeah, you're a plant murderer, you just murder anything.
Rory: As we speak, the big plant in my house is withering away, which would also be a good way to talk about growing things, actually. If something is withering, it means it is, well, its condition is getting worse and worse and it's slowly dying.
Maria: And Rory's plants are like, Rory, please give us water, water, Rory.
Rory: I do give them water, but it doesn't seem to make a difference.
Maria: Yeah, you should talk to them, hug them, touch them, talk to them, love them. Come on.
Rory: Oh, that's crazy.
Maria: So dear listeners, growing vegetables or veggies or fruits, you know, not fruit, but fruits, because lots of different kinds of fruits. And Rory told us that I barely have an interest in growing something. So barely, like I have no interest or very little interest in growing something. You said growing a houseplant. It's pretty much like a plant or vegetables.
Rory: Well, this is just to say what would be even less work, really. I don't have an interest in growing a house plant and then let alone the other things as well. So, compared to growing fruit and vegetables, I think a house plant is quite easy to grow, but you have to put in much more effort to grow a cucumber or a tomato. So I wouldn't put in any effort for that either. And I said, let alone, which is highlighting the fact that these things are much more difficult.
Maria: We can also say cultivate, cultivate a cucumber, cultivate a tomato, or a tomato plant, right? Cultivate or grow. When you cultivate, you take care of it, you grow it. You can say that I don't have patience for that. I don't have enough patience for growing vegetables. Usually, people grow plants, vegetables on the outskirts or in the suburbs, so, on the outskirts, but in the suburbs, not in the city, but outside the city, where you have beautiful fields, and people have special, I don't know, vegetable gardens, special spots where vegetables grow. And you can say, like people usually have plots of land or allotments. Allotments is just land?
Rory: Well, it's an area of land used for something. It's usually something small and personal.
Maria: Growing vegetables is not really popular in Scotland, in Rory’s country for some reason. So, no, but you said, like I'm not sure.
Rory: I know, I don't know either. I said it might be less common. Oh, but I used a modal verb. That's nice.