Examples of using "çayı" in a sentence and their english translations:
I like tea.
I love tea.
What tea do you drink? Is lemon tea okay?
The women like tea.
Whose tea is this?
I drink tea without sugar.
I like green tea.
I like this tea.
Tom likes tea.
Tom doesn't have tea.
I like herbal tea.
- I do not like green tea.
- I don't like green tea.
Pour the tea into the cup.
He likes sweet tea.
Is this jasmine tea?
Tom likes oolong tea.
Tom likes herbal tea.
Tom likes tea with cinnamon.
I'd like a chamomile.
My mum likes tea very much.
She's making parsley tea.
What tea do you prefer?
I prefer tea to coffee.
I didn't drink the tea, because it was hot.
I never drink tea with milk.
Do you like Earl Grey tea?
We bought the cheapest tea.
I like tea more than coffee.
They prefer tea to coffee.
- I want a chamomile tea.
- I'd like a camomile.
- Tom didn't drink the tea I poured for him.
- Tom didn't drink the tea that I poured for him.
Tom prefers tea to coffee.
He likes tea better than coffee.
Tom likes tea better than coffee.
Japanese green gentian tea is very bitter.
I don't like either tea or coffee.
Tom placed some cups of tea on the table.
The boldo tea is very bitter to me.
How do you like your tea?
Do you want the tea hot or iced?
Tom poured himself cup of herbal tea.
I like hot tea better than cold.
Would you prefer coffee or tea?
Some people like coffee and others prefer tea.
We import tea from India.
Indeed, Japanese sweets go well with Japanese tea.
Tom invited his relatives over for afternoon tea.
Which do you prefer, coffee or tea?
Having run the race, Jane had two glasses of barley tea.
I do not like tea, so I generally drink coffee for breakfast.
Traditional Japanese sweets really do go well with Japanese tea.
Which do you drink more, coffee or tea?
I drank free mint tea with Nicolas this evening at the restaurant.
I used to prefer black tea to coffee, but recently I've been drinking a good amount of both.