You could leave out "numerous." The grocery list included cabbage, tomatoes, celery and onions. Or, you could write it like this: The grocery list included numerous items; cabbage, tomatoes, celery and onions.
none
The grocery list consisted of numerous items, including cabbage, tomatoes, celery and onions.
sausage, rice, and tomatoes.
"my family had cabbage for dinner today!"
fruits, cabbage, tomatoes, carrots, and lychee
eggplant, carrots, pumpkins, tomatoes, lettuce, brocoli, cabbage and more.
There is no specific collective noun for cabbage, in which case a noun suitable for the context of the sentence, for example a field of cabbage, a truckload of cabbage, a sack of cabbage, etc.
If you want a cabbage recipe that won't taste bitter, you will need to cook the cabbage for a long time, until all of the firmness has gone out of the leaves.
Cabbage is not a proper noun as it is only capitalized when it is at the beginning of a sentence. example: A cabbage is a vegetable that is used to make coleslaw.
Yes. BT is a biological control, and not a pesticide. I use it on cabbage and tomatoes.
When my father saw my first paycheck, he exclaimed, "That's a lot of cabbage!". I would like stuffed cabbage for Sunday's dinner.
If one was making cabbage rolls, one would need to purchase cabbage, lentils, vegetable broth, tomatoes, tomato paste, salt, black pepper, baking soda, garlic.
To name a few - Corn, tomatoes, soy bean, pumpkin, squash, cabbage, carrots