[General] going to buy a cup of iced tea

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Silverobama

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I was in a restaurant with David and I wanted to leave. He asked me why and I said "I'm going to buy a cup of iced tea".

Next to the restaurant is a drink shop and they sell iced tea. Is it natural to use the italic sentence?
 
Iced tea comes in a glass here in the States. Is it served in cups in China? If so, your sentence is fine.
 
Iced tea comes in a glass here in the States. Is it served in cups in China? If so, your sentence is fine.

Yes, it's in a glass here too. But I bought a take-away iced tea. I can't take away a glass of iced tea. They gave me a paper cup. How can I rephrase my question?

"I'm going to buy a paper cup of iced tea".

I think the above sentence is not good, though.
 
Say "I'm going to buy an iced tea".
 
If you need to make it clear that you won't be drinking it on the premises, you could say "I'm going to get a takeaway iced tea" or "I'm going to get an iced tea to take away".
 
If you need to make it clear that you won't be drinking it on the premises, you could say "I'm going to get a takeaway iced tea" or "I'm going to get an iced tea to take away".

"To go" in American English.
 
Natural? Yes. And I'm sure David would understand, regardless of how the shop served the tea.
 
It sounds natural to my BrE ears.
 
If David says, "Why do you want to leave?" I might say:

- "To get an iced tea."

- "I want to get an iced tea."

- "I'm going next door for an iced tea."

- "They have iced tea next door."​

I would not name the container. Of course it will be in something.

I would not say I was buying it. David knows I'm not going to steal it. (I hope!)
 
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